AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on how immediate (proximal) and long-term (distal) family stressors affected the respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) regulation during interactions between mothers, fathers, and preschoolers in families at risk.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 94 families with an average child age of 3 years, observing the impact of changing task demands during a puzzle activity as well as stressful life events reported by parents.
  • Results indicated that both types of stressors led to less effective RSA self-regulation in parents and children, highlighting how stress can disrupt caregiver-child interactions and overall emotional regulation in early development.

Article Abstract

This study examined how proximal and distal familial stressors influenced the real-time, dynamic individual and dyadic regulation of respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) in mother-preschooler and father-preschooler interactions in at-risk families (N = 94, M = 3.03 years, 47% males, 77% White, 20% Latinx, data collected 2013-2017). Proximal stressors were operationalized as changing task demands (baseline, challenge, recovery) across a dyadic puzzle task. Distal stressors were measured as parent-reported stressful life events. Multilevel models revealed that greater proximal and distal stressors were related to weaker dynamic self-regulation of RSA in mothers, fathers, and children, and more discordant mother-child and father-child coregulation of RSA. Findings affirm that stress is transmitted across levels and persons to compromise real-time regulatory functioning in early, developmentally formative caregiver-child interactions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cdev.14153DOI Listing

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