Sentences with phrase «in emotional expressivity»

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.

Not exact matches

The researchers compared their emotional expressivity results to another demographic measure of immigration — the sheer number of home countries represented by immigrants living in each of 32 countries in 2013 — and found little correlation.
It's meticulously directed, the foley is as sharp and crowd pleasing as the finest Mamet dialogue, and Krasinski doesn't neglect the emotional core of the film — the family vying to survive, whose tensions, divisions and turmoil we experience in near silence, but with great expressivity and economy.
Balance in Positive Emotional Expressivity Across School Contexts Relates to Kindergartners» Adjustment.
Preliminary t - tests revealed no differences between children and adolescents in levels of dyadic emotional expressivity and flexibility.
Therefore, a critical question remains whether there are differences between parent - child dyads with AD children and non-AD children in levels of dyadic emotional expressivity (i.e., dyadic positive and negative affect).
To further narrow and enhance our understanding of group differences in dyadic emotional processes, we investigated the effects of parents» AD on emotional expressivity and flexibility in parent - child interactions.
To capture the emotional expressivity, we derived from GridWare the total duration in seconds of dyadic positive affect and dyadic negative affect during father - child and mother - child interactions.
This observational study tries to understand differences in dyadic emotional expressivity and dyadic emotional flexibility between parent - child dyads with and without AD children.
Considering that only little research to date has systematically addressed differences between father - child and mother - child dyads in these dyadic emotional processes, we explored whether emotional expressivity and flexibility differed between mother - child and father - child dyads with and without AD children.
Since none of these studies investigated emotional expressivity as a real - time sequence of dyadic emotions, one explanation for our results might be that the role of parents» and children's individual emotions in child anxiety has been overestimated.
The current investigation was designed to examine the role of positive and negative emotional expressivity in the marital relationship.
For example, mothers» positive emotional expressivity is one of the most robust predictors of adequate social - emotional functioning in children, including adaptive self - regulation and high social competence (Eisenberg et al. 1998).
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.
What we do not understand yet is how individual emotional expressivity (i.e., of parents and children) combines in a dyadic context, and how it is related to child anxiety.
Next, the effects of parental AD on group differences in expressivity and flexibility were analyzed in additional repeated measures ANOVAs, with emotional processes as within - subjects factors, and parental AD (Non-AD child and parent, child AD / non-AD parent, child and parent AD) as between - subjects factor.
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