Associations of maternal emotion regulation with child white matter connectivity in Black American mother-child dyads

被引:1
|
作者
Wang, Chenyang [1 ]
La Barrie, Dominique L. [2 ]
Powers, Abigail [3 ]
Stenson, Anais F. [4 ]
van Rooij, Sanne J. H. [3 ]
Stevens, Jennifer S. [3 ]
Jovanovic, Tanja [4 ]
Bradley, Bekh [3 ,5 ]
McGee, Robin E. [6 ]
Fani, Negar [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[2] Univ Georgia, Dept Psychol, Athens, GA 30602 USA
[3] Emory Univ, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Sch Med, 100 Woodruff Circle, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
[4] Wayne State Univ, Dept Psychiat & Behav Neurosci, Detroit, MI 48207 USA
[5] Atlanta Vet Affairs Med Ctr, Decatur, GA USA
[6] Emory Univ, Rollins Sch Publ Hlth, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
关键词
Black American; diffusion tensor imaging; emotion regulation; intergenerational; white matter connectivity; UNCINATE FASCICULUS; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; LIFE-SPAN; DYSREGULATION; STRESS; INTEGRITY; DISORDER; BEHAVIOR; HEALTHY; MEMORY;
D O I
10.1002/dev.22303
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Parental emotion regulation plays a major role in parent-child interactions, and in turn, neural plasticity in children, particularly during sensitive developmental periods. However, little is known about how parental emotion dysregulation is associated with variation in children's brain structure, which was the goal of this study. Forty-five Black American mother-child dyads were recruited from an intergenerational trauma study; emotion regulation in mothers and their children (age 8-13 years) was assessed. Diffusion-weighted images were collected in children; deterministic tractography was used to reconstruct pathways of relevance to emotion regulation. Metrics of white matter connectivity [fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD)] were extracted for pathways. Socio-economic variables were also included in statistical models. Maternal emotion dysregulation was the strongest predictor of child fornix MD (r = .35, p = .001), indicating that more severe emotion dysregulation in mothers corresponded with lower fornix connectivity in children. Maternal impulsivity was a strong predictor of child fornix MD (r = .51, p < .001). Maternal emotion dysregulation may adversely influence connectivity of the child.s fornix, a hippocampal-striatal pathway implicated in reward processes; these associations remained even after accounting for other socio-environmental factors. Dysregulated maternal emotions may uniquely impact children's adaptation to trauma/stress by affecting networks that support appetitive processing.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Child self-regulation profiles relate to emotion parenting in Black and Latinx mother-child dyads
    George, Andrea M.
    Hale, Molly E.
    Wang, Haobi
    Abney, Drew
    Caughy, Margaret O.
    Suveg, Cynthia
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 95
  • [2] Language Matching Among Mother-child Dyads: Associations with Child Attachment and Emotion Reactivity
    Borelli, Jessica L.
    Ramsook, Kizzann A.
    Smiley, Patricia
    Bond, David Kyle
    West, Jessica L.
    Buttitta, Katherine H.
    [J]. SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, 2017, 26 (03) : 610 - 629
  • [3] Attachment, Parental Meta-Emotion, and Emotion Regulation in Adoptive Mother-Child Dyads
    Merchant, Erin K.
    Borders, L. DiAnne
    Henson, Robert A.
    [J]. FAMILY JOURNAL, 2019, 27 (04): : 387 - 393
  • [4] Maternal guidance in at-risk mother-child dyads: Associations with contextual variables
    Briscoe, Ciara
    Stack, Dale M.
    Serbin, Lisa A.
    Ledingham, Jane E.
    Schwartzman, Alex E.
    [J]. INFANT AND CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2017, 26 (05):
  • [5] Daily Associations of Stress and Eating in Mother-Child Dyads
    Dunton, Genevieve F.
    Dzubur, Eldin
    Huh, Jimi
    Belcher, Britni R.
    Maher, Jaclyn P.
    O'Connor, Sydney
    Margolin, Gayla
    [J]. HEALTH EDUCATION & BEHAVIOR, 2017, 44 (03) : 365 - 369
  • [6] Socialization of children's emotion regulation in mother-child dyads: A developmental psychopathology perspective
    Shipman, KL
    Zeman, J
    [J]. DEVELOPMENT AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2001, 13 (02) : 317 - 336
  • [7] Emotional exchange in mother-child dyads: Stability, mutual influence, and associations with maternal depression and child problem behavior
    Feng, Xin
    Shaw, Daniel S.
    Skuban, Emily M.
    Lane, Tonya
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FAMILY PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 21 (04) : 714 - 725
  • [8] PHYSIOLOGICAL CONCORDANCE IN MOTHER-CHILD DYADS IN THE CONTEXT OF MATERNAL EMOTIONAL ABUSE HISTORY AND EMOTION DYSREGULATION
    O'Brien, Jacqueline R.
    Zalewski, Maureen
    [J]. PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 2017, 79 (04) : A97 - A97
  • [9] VERBAL INTERACTION IN MOTHER-CHILD DYADS
    REICHLE, JE
    LONGHURST, TM
    STEPANICH, L
    [J]. DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1976, 12 (04) : 273 - 277
  • [10] Maternal negative affect moderates behavioral and physiological synchrony in Latinx and Black mother-child dyads
    Hale, Molly E.
    Morrow, Kayley E.
    George, Andrea M.
    Gayer, Amy
    Caughy, Margaret O.
    Suveg, Cynthia
    [J]. DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, 2023, 65 (05) : e22394