We assessed linkages of mothers’ emotion coaching and children’s emotion regulation and emotion lability/negativity with children’s adjustment in 72 mother-child dyads seeking treatment for Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD). Dyads completed questionnaires and discussed emotion-related family events. Maternal emotion coaching was associated with children’s emotion regulation, which in turn was related to higher mother-reported adaptive skills, higher child-reported internalizing symptoms, and lower child-reported adjustment. When children were high in emotion lability/negativity, mothers’ emotion coaching was associated with lower mother and child reports of externalizing behavior. Results suggest the role of emotion regulation and emotion lability in child awareness of socio-emotional problems and support the potential of maternal emotion coaching as a protective factor for children with ODD, especially for those high in emotion lability.
Individuals create meaning from the events in their lives, and the ways in which they do this has important implications for identity and well-being. We argue that this is a deeply developmental process. Narrative meaning-making consists of a set of developmentally acquired skills and abilities such that individuals are capable of different forms of meaning creation at different developmental periods. Further, narrative meaning-making emerges differentially across days, weeks, months, and years after an experience, and this event processing takes place within ongoing developmental change. Narrating life experiences both reflects and creates modes of meaningmaking in a complex, reciprocal system. Keywords narratives, meaning-making, development Our selves are at least partly defined by our memories. A long history of cognitive research has tracked the amount, accuracy, and durability of autobiographical memory (see Baddeley, 2004 for a review), but it is only in the past two decades that autobiographical narratives have been examined as a form of identity (McAdams, 1993; McAdams & McLean, 2013). For narrative identity,
Affective Social Competence (ASC) is a conceptual framework describing complementary processes of sending, receiving, and experiencing emotions in dynamic interactions. This framework may be applied across the lifespan. To date, however, empirical studies addressing ASC have focused predominantly on childhood samples. In this review, we examine empirical evidence relevant to ASC in adolescence in comparison with childhood. We then discuss future directions that may promote understanding of Affective Social Competence among adolescent samples: the use of person‐oriented analyses to integrate all three components of ASC; consideration of understudied social contexts that may influence and be influenced by ASC; and use of microgenetic designs to examine growth across transitions during early, middle, and late adolescence.
We examined whether maternal emotion coaching at pre-treatment predicted
children's treatment response following a 12-week program addressing children's
Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) symptoms. Eighty-nine mother-child dyads
participated. At pre-treatment, mothers and children engaged in an emotion talk
task. Mothers also reported their beliefs about emotions at pre-treatment and
their child's disruptive behavior symptoms, emotion regulation, and emotion
lability/negativity at pre-, mid-, and post-treatment. Clinicians reported
children's symptom severity at pre- and post-treatment. Children's emotion
lability/negativity moderated effects of maternal emotion coaching on children's
post-treatment ODD symptoms, with stronger benefits of emotion coaching for
children high in emotion lability/negativity. Results suggest that emotion
coaching may promote treatment response for children with ODD who are especially
at risk due to their emotionality.
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