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Yang, Xiao; Ram, Nilam; Lougheed, Jessica P.; Molenaar, Peter C. M.; Hollenstein, Tom – Developmental Psychology, 2019
An individual's emotions system can be conceived of as a synchronized, coordinated, and/or emergent combination of physiology, experience, and behavioral components. Together, the interplay among these components produce emotional experiences through coordinated excitatory positive feedback (i.e., the mutual amplification of emotion concordance)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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McKernan, Charlotte J.; Lucas-Thompson, Rachel G. – Developmental Psychology, 2018
Although negative interparental conflict predicts elevated externalizing problems for children, there are individual differences in this association. Theoretically, children's abilities to coordinate physiological stress across response systems moderate the effects of interparental conflict on developmental outcomes. Past cross-sectional research…
Descriptors: Psychophysiology, Parent Influence, Conflict, Interpersonal Relationship
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Abaied, Jamie L.; Stanger, Sarah B.; Wagner, Caitlin; Sanders, Wesley; Dyer, W. Justin; Padilla-Walker, Laura – Developmental Psychology, 2018
A burgeoning literature supports the role of autonomic nervous system (ANS) functioning as an index of physiologic sensitivity to the environment, but extant research is limited in its focus on single branches of the ANS, childhood samples, and solely negative environmental factors. This study seeks to address these limitations by exploring…
Descriptors: Physiology, Psychophysiology, Mothers, Emotional Adjustment
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Bahm, Naomi I. Gribneau; Simon-Thomas, Emiliana R.; Main, Mary; Hesse, Erik – Developmental Psychology, 2017
This study investigates whether individual differences in attachment status can be detected by electrophysiological responses to loss-themed pictures. The Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) was used to identify discourse/reasoning lapses during the discussion of loss experiences via death that place speakers in the Unresolved/disorganized AAI…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Tests, Interviews, Attachment Behavior, Death
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Bernard, Kristin; Kuzava, Sierra; Simons, Robert; Dozier, Mary – Developmental Psychology, 2018
Maltreating mothers often struggle to respond sensitively to their children's distress. Examining psychophysiological processing of own child cues may offer insight into neurobiological mechanisms that promote sensitive parenting among high-risk mothers. The current study used event-related potential (ERP) methodology to examine associations…
Descriptors: Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Emotional Disturbances, Biochemistry
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Cuevas, Kimberly; Bell, Martha Ann; Marcovitch, Stuart; Calkins, Susan D. – Developmental Psychology, 2012
We recorded electroencephalogram (EEG; 6-9 Hz) and heart rate (HR) from infants at 5 and 10 months of age during baseline and performance on the looking A-not-B task of infant working memory (WM). Longitudinal baseline-to-task comparisons revealed WM-related increases in EEG power (all electrodes) and EEG coherence (medial frontal-occipital…
Descriptors: Medicine, Rhetoric, Metabolism, Psychophysiology
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Groh, Ashley M.; Roisman, Glenn I. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
This article examines the extent to which secure base script knowledge--as reflected in an adult's ability to generate narratives in which attachment-related threats are recognized, competent help is provided, and the problem is resolved--is associated with adults' autonomic and subjective emotional responses to infant distress and nondistress…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Infants, Adults, Age Differences
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Roisman, Glenn I. – Developmental Psychology, 2007
To better understand the origins of autonomic reactivity during marital interactions, this study examined the psychophysiological profiles of prototypically secure (vs. insecure) and deactivating (vs. hyperactivating) adults while they talked about areas of disagreement with their (pre)marital partners. Adults who idealized their caregivers…
Descriptors: Psychophysiology, Metabolism, Caregivers, Attachment Behavior
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Gunnar, Megan R.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1989
Examined relations among adrenocortical stress reactivity, infant emotional or proneness-to-distress temperament, and quality of attachment in 66 infants tested at 9 and 13 months. Adrenocortical activity was not associated with attachment classifications. Significant only at 9 months, elevations in cortisol were small. (RH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attachment Behavior, Infants, Personality
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Buss, Kristin A.; Davidson, Richard J.; Kalin, Ned H.; Goldsmith, H. Hill – Developmental Psychology, 2004
The putative association between fear-related behaviors and peripheral sympathetic and neuroendocrine reactivity has not been replicated consistently. This inconsistency was addressed in a reexamination of the characterization of children with extreme fearful reactions by focusing on the match between distress behaviors and the eliciting context.…
Descriptors: Metabolism, Fear, Toddlers, Psychophysiology
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Diamond, Adele; Churchland, Anne; Cruess, Loren; Kirkham, Natasha Z. – Developmental Psychology, 1999
This study used delayed nonmatching to sample (DNMS) to test the recognition memory function dependent on the medial temporal lobe. Results from three conditions of DNMS tests with 9- and 12-month-olds suggest that the critical late-maturing competence accounting for DNMS success is the ability to understand that the stimulus is a symbol or marker…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Development, Feedback, Infants
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Wiesenfeld, Alan R.; Klorman, Rafael – Developmental Psychology, 1978
Investigated the autonomic reactions (heart rate and skin conductance) of 17 mothers of five-month-old infants to two landscape scenes and four types of videotaped segments depicting their own baby and an unfamiliar baby smiling or crying. (JMB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Emotional Response, Heart Rate, Infants
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Fox, Nathan A.; Davidson, Richard J. – Developmental Psychology, 1987
Reports relationship between asymmetries in frontal-brain electrical activity and individual differences in affective response in 35 ten-month-old females. Stranger-approach, mother-approach, and maternal-separation experiences were presented while an electroencephalogram (EEG) from scalp regions was recorded and facial and other behavioral…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attachment Behavior, Behavior Rating Scales, Electroencephalography
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Izard, Carroll E.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1991
Examined cardiac activity during the first 13 months of life. Indexes of cardiac activity changed in an orderly way with development. There were intercorrelations among the cardiac measures. Analyses indicated that measures of heart-rate variability were significantly higher in insecure children than in secure children. (BC)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Development, Heart Rate, Infant Behavior
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Evans, Gary W. – Developmental Psychology, 2003
This study modeled physical and psychosocial aspects of home environment and personal characteristics in a cumulative risk heuristic. Found that elevated cumulative risk was associated with heightened cardiovascular and neuroendocrine parameters, increased deposition of body fat, and higher summary index of total allostatic load. Replicated…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Behavior Problems, Cardiovascular System, Children