five minute speech sample
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

28
(FIVE YEARS 1)

H-INDEX

11
(FIVE YEARS 0)

Autism ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 136236132110443
Author(s):  
Jodie Smith ◽  
Rhylee Sulek ◽  
Cherie C Green ◽  
Catherine A Bent ◽  
Lacey Chetcuti ◽  
...  

Many autistic children have co-occurring behavioural problems influencing core autism symptomology potentially relevant for intervention planning. Parental Expressed Emotion – reflecting critical, hostile and overprotective comments – contributes to understanding and predicting behaviour in autistic school-aged children, adolescents and adults and is typically measured using the Five-Minute Speech Sample. However, limitations exist for its use with parents of younger autistic children and so the Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample was adapted with the goal of better measuring parent Expressed Emotion in the context of childhood autism. The Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample has not yet been used to explore Expressed Emotion in parents of autistic preschoolers, nor has the relative predictive utility of the Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample and Five-Minute Speech Sample been evaluated in the same sample. We compared the two measures from speech samples provided by 51 Australian parents with newly diagnosed autistic preschoolers, including investigating their predictive value for concurrent and subsequent child internalising and externalising behaviour problems. While Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample Expressed Emotion and Five-Minute Speech Sample Expressed Emotion were associated in this sample, only Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample codes contributed significant predictive value for concurrent and subsequent child problem behaviour. These preliminary data strengthen the position that the Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample may better capture Expressed Emotion, than the Five-Minute Speech Sample, among parents of autistic preschool-aged children. Lay abstract Parental Expressed Emotion refers to the intensity and nature of emotion shown when a parent talks about their child, and has been linked to child behaviour outcomes. Parental Expressed Emotion has typically been measured using the Five-Minute Speech Sample; however, the Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample was developed to better capture Expressed Emotion for parents of children on the autism spectrum. In each case, parents are asked to talk for 5 min about their child and how they get along with their child. Parents’ statements are then coded for features such as number of positive and critical comments, or statements reflecting strong emotional involvement. While both the Five-Minute Speech Sample and Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample have been used with parents of autistic school-aged children, their relative usefulness for measuring Expressed Emotion in parents of preschool-aged children – including their links to child behaviour problems in this group – is unclear. We collected speech samples from 51 parents of newly diagnosed autistic preschoolers to investigate similarities and differences in results from the Five-Minute Speech Sample and Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample coding schemes. This included exploring the extent to which the Five-Minute Speech Sample and Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample, separately, or together, predicted current and future child behaviour problems. While the two measures were related, we found only the Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample – but not the Five-Minute Speech Sample – was related to child behavioural challenges. This adds support to the suggestion that the Autism-Specific Five-Minute Speech Sample may be a more useful measure of parental Expressed Emotion in this group, and provides a first step towards understanding how autistic children might be better supported by targeting parental Expressed Emotion.



2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 830-839
Author(s):  
Nicolas Favez ◽  
Sarah Cairo Notari ◽  
Tania Antonini ◽  
Linda Charvoz

The aim of this study was to assess the links between partners’ and women’s expressed emotion with the distress of one another during the first year after surgery for breast cancer in women. The design was longitudinal. A sample of 61 couples participated in the study at 2 weeks, 3 months, and 12 months after the surgery. Expressed emotion was assessed with the Five-Minute Speech Sample. Psychological distress was assessed with a self-reported questionnaire. Mixed-model analyses showed that partners’ expressed emotion is associated with heightened psychological distress in women during the first year after surgery, even after medical data were controlled for.



2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 150-160
Author(s):  
Katharine M. Mark ◽  
Alison Pike ◽  
Rachel M. Latham ◽  
Bonamy R. Oliver

We investigated the association between maternal expressed emotion and twin relationship quality, after controlling for a maternal questionnaire measure of the mother–child relationship. This was explored within a community sample of 156 mothers and their two young twin children (Mchild age = 3.69 years; SDchild age = 0.37). Mothers reported on the twin–twin relationship and the mother–child relationship via questionnaire. They were also interviewed about each child using the innovative Preschool Five Minute Speech Sample (Daley et al., 2003), which yields information about relative positive:negative maternal expressed emotion. Mothers who expressed more family-wide positive emotion and less family-wide negative emotion also reported more positivity, but not negativity, within the twin relationship — even when controlling for questionnaire reports of the mother–child relationship. Counter to expectations, discrepancies in mothers’ expressed emotion between their twins also predicted more positive sibling relationships. Our findings corroborate the well established spill-over effect, whereby families are viewed as emotional units of interdependent individuals, none of whom can be understood in isolation from one another. Most importantly, the Preschool Five Minute Speech Sample provides information about mothering that questionnaire reports may not, and thus it is a useful tool in better understanding the twin family system.



2016 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 245-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Asbrand ◽  
Nina Heinrichs ◽  
Brunna Tuschen-Caffier

Zusammenfassung. Theoretischer Hintergrund: Ziel dieser Studie ist die Untersuchung von Expressed Emotion (EE) als Faktor des familiären Klimas sowie elterlicher Angst vor negativer Bewertung des Kindes als potentieller Mediator für den Zusammenhang von sozialer Angst der Eltern und Kinder. Methode: Kinder mit Sozialer Angststörung (SAS; n = 64) und ohne SAS (healthy control, HC, n = 52) sowie deren Eltern (Mütter und Väter) berichteten über eigene soziale Ängste und ihre Angst vor negativer Bewertung des Kindes. Mütter nahmen zudem am Five Minute Speech Sample (FMSS) zur Erhebung von EE teil. Ergebnisse: Berichte von Müttern von Kindern mit einer SAS wurden häufiger als High Expressed Emotion (HEE) eingestuft als Berichte von Müttern von HC Kindern. Es zeigte sich ein Zusammenhang von EE und sozialer Angst der Mutter wie auch mütterlicher Angst vor negativer Bewertung des Kindes. Zudem wurde der Zusammenhang zwischen kindlicher und mütterlicher sozialer Angst partiell durch die Angst vor negativer Bewertung des Kindes mediiert. Schlussfolgerungen: Es konnte ein Zusammenhang von kindlicher SAS und gleichzeitig erhöhtem EE der Mütter gezeigt werden. Erhöhte Angst vor negativer Bewertung des Kindes stellt einen potenziellen Mechanismus dar, wie mütterliche, nicht aber väterliche, soziale Angst an das Kind vermittelt werden kann.



2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Weston ◽  
David J. Hawes ◽  
David S. Pasalich


2016 ◽  
Vol 67 ◽  
pp. 9-12
Author(s):  
Rebecca Band ◽  
Ella Chadwick ◽  
Hannah Hickman ◽  
Christine Barrowclough ◽  
Alison Wearden


Author(s):  
Susan Schloß ◽  
Magdalena Schramm ◽  
Hanna Christiansen ◽  
Kristin-Katharina Scholz ◽  
Lioba Carmen Schuh ◽  
...  

Zusammenfassung. Störungen der Eltern-Kind-Beziehung wie Feindseligkeit, geringe Wärme und mangelnde Responsivität/Feinfühligkeit der Bezugspersonen gehen oftmals mit externalisierenden Störungen des Kindes und einem ungünstigen Entwicklungsverlauf einher. Das Preschool Five Minute Speech Sample (PFMSS) wurde zur ökonomischen Messung von Aspekten einer gestörten Eltern-Kind-Beziehung speziell im Vorschulalter entwickelt. Wir untersuchen Validitätsaspekte der deutschsprachigen Version des PFMSS und gehen der Frage nach, ob die Skalen dieser Version mit einer Verhaltensbeobachtung elterlicher Feinfühligkeit, mit Symptomen der Aufmerksamkeitsdefizit-/Hyperaktivitätsstörung (ADHS), oppositionellen Symptomen sowie mütterlicher Depressivität assoziiert sind. Die Stichprobe besteht aus n = 114 Familien mit 4 bis 5-jährigen Kindern; davon n = 65 (57 %) mit erhöhter ADHS-Symptomatik. Die Rekrutierung erfolgte über Kindergärten/-tagesstätten nach einem Fragebogen-Screening. Mütterliche Feinfühligkeit wurde in einer Verhaltensbeobachtung der Mutter-Kind-Interaktion während eines Hausbesuchs gemessen. ADHS- und oppositionelle Symptome sowie mütterliche Depressivität wurden durch ein klinisches Interview respektive per Fragebogen erfasst. Die PFMSS-Skalen zeigten überwiegend die erwarteten signifikanten Zusammenhänge mit mütterlicher Feinfühligkeit, ADHS- und oppositionellen Symptomen des Kindes. Mit dem deutschsprachigen PFMSS liegt somit eine ökonomische und valide Methode zur Erfassung von Störungen der Eltern-Kind-Beziehung im Kontext externalisierender Verhaltensauffälligkeiten im Vorschulalter vor.



Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document