Maternal mentalization and child emotion regulation: A comparison of different phases of early childhood

2022 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 101681
Author(s):  
Naiara Álvarez ◽  
Marta Herrero Lázaro ◽  
Leire Gordo ◽  
Leire Iriarte Elejalde ◽  
Ana Martínez Pampliega
Emotion ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-53
Author(s):  
Ellie M. Harrington ◽  
Shaina D. Trevino ◽  
Sheila Lopez ◽  
Nicole R. Giuliani

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars White ◽  
Charlotte Catharina Schulz ◽  
Margerete Schött ◽  
Melanie Kungl ◽  
Jan Keil ◽  
...  

Humans are strongly dependent upon social resources for allostasis and emotion regulation. This applies especially to early childhood because humans – as an altricial species – have a prolonged period of dependency on support and input from caregivers who typically act as sources of co-regulation. Accordingly, attachment theory proposes that the history and quality of early interactions with primary caregivers shape children’s internal working models of attachment. In turn, these attachment models guide behavior, initially with the set goal of maintaining proximity to caregivers, but eventually paving the way to more generalized mental representations of self and others. Mounting evidence in nonclinical populations suggests that these mental representations coincide with differential patterns of neural structure, function, and connectivity in a range of brain regions previously associated with emotional and cognitive capacities. What is currently lacking, however, is an evidence-based account of how early adverse attachment-related experiences and/or the emergence of attachment disorganization impact the developing brain. While work on early childhood adversities offers important insights, we propose that how these events become biologically embedded crucially hinges on the context of the child-caregiver attachment relationships in which the events take place. Our selective review distinguishes between direct social neuroscience research on disorganized attachment and indirect maltreatment-related research, converging on aberrant functioning in neurobiological systems subserving aversion, approach, emotion regulation, and mental state processing in the wake of severe attachment disruption. To account for heterogeneity of findings, we propose two distinct neurobiological phenotypes characterized by hyper- and hypo-arousal primarily deriving from the caregiver serving either as a threatening or as an insufficient source of co-regulation, respectively.


2016 ◽  
Vol 142 ◽  
pp. 245-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole B. Perry ◽  
Margaret M. Swingler ◽  
Susan D. Calkins ◽  
Martha Ann Bell

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catalina Morales-Murillo ◽  
Pau García-Grau ◽  
Rosa Fernández-Valero

Child interactions with the environment (adults, peers, materials) constitute the engine for development and learning, especially in early stages of development. Emotionally secure, responsive, and contingent interactions with adults and peers promote emotional, cognitive, and social development. Interpersonal interactions facilitate the acquisition of social skills and emotion regulation strategies, which are learned through the observation of the behaviors of adults and peers and through the direct interactions with them. This chapter presents the theoretical foundations for considering interpersonal relations as engines of development, and synthetizes the latest results on the impact of interpersonal relationships on the development of children in natural environments (school, home, and the community).


2021 ◽  
pp. 106762
Author(s):  
Sarah M. Coyne ◽  
Jane Shawcroft ◽  
Megan Gale ◽  
Douglas A. Gentile ◽  
Jordan T. Etherington ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 1173-1190
Author(s):  
Daniel Berry ◽  
Alyssa R. Palmer ◽  
Rebecca Distefano ◽  
Ann S. Masten

AbstractDeveloping the ability to regulate one's emotions in accordance with contextual demands (i.e., emotion regulation) is a central developmental task of early childhood. These processes are supported by the engagement of the autonomic nervous system (ANS), a physiological hub of a vast network tasked with dynamically integrating real-time experiential inputs with internal motivational and goal states. To date, much of what is known about the ANS and emotion regulation has been based on measures of respiratory sinus arrhythmia, a cardiac indicator of parasympathetic activity. In the present study, we draw from dynamical systems models to introduce two nonlinear indices of cardiac complexity (fractality and sample entropy) as potential indicators of these broader ANS dynamics. Using data from a stratified sample of preschoolers living in high- (i.e., emergency homeless shelter) and low-risk contexts (N = 115), we show that, in conjunction with respiratory sinus arrhythmia, these nonlinear indices may help to clarify important differences in the behavioral manifestations of emotion regulation. In particular, our results suggest that cardiac complexity may be especially useful for discerning active, effortful emotion regulation from less effortful regulation and dysregulation.


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