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Physiological reactivity to stress and parental support: Comparison of clinical and non-clinical adolescents
Authors
Ainsworth
Ainsworth
+49 more
Allen
Bender
Berntson
Boomsma
Bradley
Burgess
Calkins
Cassidy
Crowell
De Geus
Diamond
Dietrich
Eisenberg
El Sheikh
El Sheikh
Forbes
Fox
Grossman
Huffman
Johnson
Keenan
Kemeny
Kobak
Main
Maunder
Mezzacappa
Mikulincer
Myrtek
Oosterman
Oosterman
Porges
Porges
Riese
Rosenstein
Rottenberg
Salomon
Schore
Scott Brown
Southam-Gerow
Spangler
Sroufe
Stevenson-Hinde
Stifter
Thompson
Uchino
Waters
Willemsen
Willemsen-Swinkels
Zelenko
Publication date
1 January 2008
Publisher
Doi
Abstract
An Alarm Stress Task was developed to study affect regulation in the context of parent-child interactions in adolescents (mean age = 12.72, standard deviation = 2.06) with (n = 20) and without (n = 20) mental health problems. Changes in heart rate (HR), pre-ejection period (PEP) and respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) were used as indicators of affect regulation. HR increased, and PEP and RSA decreased significantly in reaction to a suggested failure on a simple task, indicating that this procedure induced affective arousal in adolescents. During reunion with the parent, RSA increased significantly. Support seeking on reunion was associated with stronger parasympathetic reactivity during stress and reunion, consistent with the model that the parasympathetic system is involved when affect is regulated by social engagement. Quality of parent-adolescent interactive behaviour was overall lower in the clinical sample. Individual and relationship-based processes of affect regulation may be simultaneously assessed, highlighting the continuing importance of the parent-child relationship in adolescence for affect regulation and mental health. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
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