Finally, while fathers» contribution and role during interactions with children might be different from that of mothers, particularly when fathers have an AD themselves (Bögels and Phares 2008; Lunkenheimer et al. 2011; Morris et al. 2007; Suveg et al. 2008), studies mostly
examined emotional expressivity and flexibility of mother - child dyads.
Not exact matches
The current investigation was designed to
examine the role of positive and negative
emotional expressivity in the marital relationship.
Vital information about the dyadic and interrelated nature of emotions might be missing when
examining parents» and children's
emotional expressivity during interactions in isolation from each other.
This observational study
examined differences in
emotional expressivity and
emotional flexibility of parent - child dyads with AD children and non-AD children, the effects of parental AD on
expressivity and flexibility of dyads, and differences between father - child and mother - child dyads.