AI Article Synopsis

  • Parent-child coregulation is the mutual process where parents and children influence each other's emotional and goal-directed behaviors, affecting the child's ability to self-regulate.
  • The study explored the effects of two specific coregulation patterns—dyadic contingency and dyadic flexibility—on preschoolers' self-regulation, using tasks performed by mother-child pairs when the children were 3 and assessing self-regulation at age 4.
  • Results showed that positive or neutral interactions lead to better self-regulation in children, while negative interactions had the opposite effect, highlighting the importance of the emotional tone in parent-child interactions for developmental outcomes.

Article Abstract

Parent-child coregulation, thought to support children's burgeoning regulatory capacities, is the process by which parents and their children regulate one another through their goal-oriented behavior and expressed affect. Two particular coregulation patterns-dyadic contingency and dyadic flexibility-appear beneficial in early childhood, but their role in the typical development of self-regulation is not yet clear. The present study examined whether dynamic parent-child patterns of dyadic contingency and dyadic flexibility in both affect and goal-oriented behavior (e.g., discipline, compliance) predicted multiple components of preschoolers' self-regulation. Mother-child dyads ( = 100) completed structured and unstructured dyadic tasks in the laboratory at age 3, and mothers completed child self-regulation measures at age 4. Findings showed that more flexible and contingent affective parent-child processes, as long as the affective content was primarily positive or neutral, predicted higher levels of self-regulation in early childhood. However, when dyads engaged in more negative affective and behavioral content, higher levels of affective and behavioral contingency and behavioral flexibility predicted lower levels of child self-regulation. Findings suggest parent-child coregulation processes play a meaningful role in children's typical regulatory development and that parent-child coregulation patterns can be potentially adaptive or maladaptive for child outcomes depending on the content of the interaction. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7556995PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dev0000926DOI Listing

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