20 results on '"five minute speech sample"'
Search Results
2. Expressed Emotion in Families of Children With and Without Autism Spectrum Disorder, Cerebral Palsy and Down Syndrome: Relations with Parenting Stress and Parenting Behaviors.
- Author
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De Clercq, Lana E., Prinzie, Peter, Warreyn, Petra, Soenens, Bart, Dieleman, Lisa M., and De Pauw, Sarah S. W.
- Subjects
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AUTISM , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *PSYCHOLOGY of children with disabilities , *PARENTS of children with disabilities , *DOWN syndrome , *CRITICISM , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *PARENTING , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *EMOTIONS , *CEREBRAL palsy , *PARENT-child relationships , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *CONTROL (Psychology) - Abstract
This study examined the family emotional climate as assessed by Five Minute Speech Samples and the relation with parenting stress and parenting behaviors among parents of children (6–17 years, 64.7% boys) with autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, and without any known disability (n = 447). The large majority of parents (79%) showed low levels of Expressed Emotion, an indicator of a positive family climate. In all groups, more Emotional Over-involvement, more Criticism and fewer expressions of Warmth were associated with higher levels of parenting stress. Across groups, Emotional Over-involvement was related to more autonomy-supportive parenting, Criticism to more psychologically controlling and overreactive parenting, and Warmth was associated with more responsive and less psychologically controlling and overreactive parenting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood: Primiparous parents' representations of their child in relation to parental sensitivity
- Author
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Marjolein C.E. Branger, Rosanneke A.G. Emmen, Mi-lan J. Woudstra, Lenneke R.A. Alink, and Judi Mesman
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Five minute speech sample ,Narrative coherence ,Pregnancy ,Representation ,Parental sensitivity ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Narrative coherence reflects parents' ability to provide a believable, clear, relevant, and internally consistent story about their child. Parents demonstrating more narrative coherence have been theorized to show higher parental sensitivity, but this has not been examined in a normative sample, nor across the transition to parenthood, and only once in fathers. The aim of this study was to examine stability and change in narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood in mothers and fathers, as well as the relation between pre- and postnatal narrative coherence and postnatal parental sensitivity. The sample consisted of 105 primiparous expecting parents. Narrative coherence was measured at 36-weeks pregnancy and when the child was 4 months old, using the Five Minute Speech Sample procedure. Parental sensitivity was observed in three episodes. Results demonstrated that narrative coherence was moderately stable (correlations) across the transition to parenthood in fathers only. Both mothers' and fathers' narrative coherence improved over time. Furthermore, mothers and fathers were overall equally coherent, and maternal and paternal narrative coherence were positively interrelated during pregnancy only. Lastly, our findings showed weak evidence for the theorized link between narrative coherence and parental sensitivity: only postnatal narrative coherence predicted paternal sensitivity, only during free play. Our findings give new insight in the development of narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood, and how it relates to actual parenting. More research is needed to confirm our findings and further explore this topic.
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- 2022
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4. Parental Expressed Emotion Towards Child with Psychiatric Disorder vs. Healthy Sibling.
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Gnainsky, Miri, Shoval, Gal, Lubbad, Nesrin, Goldzweig, Gil, and Hasson-Ohayon, Ilanit
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PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *EMOTIONS , *CHILD psychopathology , *BURDEN of care , *COMMUNICATION , *PARENT-child relationships - Abstract
Coping with a child's psychiatric disorder involves various challenges for parents that can result in family burden. One factor related to family burden, which has been examined in previous studies, involves the interaction of the parent with the child diagnosed with the disorder. The current study, expanding on this notion, examined the interactions between parents and two of their children, one with a disorder and one without, by assessing parental expressed emotion (EE). The study also assessed the relations between the interactions with each child, examining whether these two interactions were positively or negatively-related: the "spillover hypothesis" and the "compensation hypothesis," respectively. In addition, the current study examined a mediation model whereby parental competence would mediate the association between parental EE towards each child and perceived family burden. 41 parents, whose children were treated at a mental health center, participated in the study. The Five Minute Speech Sample was administered to the parents to assess parental EE, as well as scales of parental competence and family burden. Results showed positive correlations between parental EE towards the two children (in the relationship and warmth subscales). The mediation model was confirmed only with regard to parental EE (relationship subscale) towards the child with the disorder. These findings support the spillover hypothesis, according to which feelings and cognitions are transferred from one family subsystem to another. Findings also highlight the importance of sense of competence in parenting a child with a psychiatric disorder, as it reduces family burden. Highlights: Parental expressed emotion (EE) towards child with a disorder and healthy child were positively-related. The finding supports the "spillover hypothesis"—transferring emotions from one child to the other. More warmth and less emotional over-involvement towards the healthy child were observed. We found negative association between parents competence and family burden. Parental competence is a key factor in reducing family burden for a child with a disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Vasopressin and parental expressed emotion in the transition to fatherhood.
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Lotz, Anna M., Rijlaarsdam, Jolien, Witteman, Jurriaan, Meijer, Willemijn, van Dijk, Kim, van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H., and Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J.
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FATHERHOOD , *SPEECH evaluation , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *INTRANASAL medication , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *VASOPRESSIN , *STATISTICAL sampling , *EMOTIONS - Abstract
In the last decades, parenting researchers increasingly focused on the role of fathers in child development. However, it is still largely unknown which factors contribute to fathers' beliefs about their child, which may be crucial in the transition to fatherhood. In the current randomized within-subject experiment, the effect of nasal administration of vasopressin (AVP) on both Five Minute Speech Sample-based (FMSS) expressed emotion and emotional content or prosody was explored in 25 prospectivefathers. Moreover, we explored how the transition to fatherhood affected these FMSS-based parameters, using prenatal and early postnatal measurements. Analyses revealed that FMSS-based expressed emotion and emotional content were correlated, but not affected by prenatal AVP administration. However,child's birth was associated with an increase in positivity and a decrease in emotional prosody, suggesting that the child's birth is more influential with regard to paternal thoughts and feelings than prenatal AVP administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. A Meta-analytic Review of the Five Minute Speech Sample as a Measure of Family Emotional Climate for Youth: Relations with Internalizing and Externalizing Symptomatology.
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Rea, Hannah M., Factor, Reina S., Kao, Wesley, and Shaffer, Anne
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EXTERNALIZING behavior , *RANDOM effects model , *SOCIAL problems , *SYMPTOMS , *ADOLESCENT development - Abstract
The Five Minute Speech Sample's (FMSS) measure of parental expressed emotion (EE), defined as criticism (CRIT) and emotional overinvolvement (EOI), has been increasingly used to measure family emotional climate in relation to youth psychopathological development. As CRIT and EOI were defined based on adults, a meta-analysis and systematic review was conducted to analyze the presence and strength of an effect among maternal CRIT and EOI with youth internalizing and externalizing problems. A random effects model was used to analyze the 42 studies on families of youth (aged 1.5 to 19). There was a small, significant relation among maternal CRIT with youth internalizing and externalizing problems and among EOI with youth internalizing problems. EOI was not significantly related to externalizing problems. The current study suggests that the FMSS measure of CRIT is a more robust correlate of youth internalizing and externalizing symptoms than EOI, but EOI does relate to internalizing behaviors. Few moderators emerged, highlighting a continued need to identify factors accounting for heterogeneity. The current results suggest that the FMSS measure of CRIT may be a valuable measure of the family emotional climate in families of youth, but care should be taken when including analyses on EOI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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7. Bidirectional Relations between Parent Warmth and Criticism and the Symptoms and Behavior Problems of Children with Autism.
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Hickey, Emily J., Bolt, Daniel, Rodriguez, Geovanna, and Hartley, Sigan L.
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BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *FATHER-child relationship , *AUTISTIC children , *PARENT-child relationships , *MOTHER-child relationship , *PARENTS , *SPEECH apraxia - Abstract
Family research in the field of ASD has focused on describing the impact of child challenges on parents, usually mothers, and given little attention to the ways in which mothers and fathers reciprocally influence the development of the child with ASD. The current study examined the direction of effects between the emotional quality of the mother-child and father-child relationships and the child's severity of ASD symptoms and emotional and behavioral problems across three time points spanning 2 years. Using parent Five Minute Speech Samples and teacher ratings of the severity of the child's ASD symptoms and emotional and behavioral problems, four cross-lagged structural equation models were employed to test bidirectional effects between parent warmth and criticism and child ASD symptoms and emotional and behavioral problems across three waves of data (approximately 12 months apart) in 159 families who had a child with ASD (initially aged 6 to 13 years). Mothers and fathers had an average age of 39.53 (SD=5.55) and 41.66 years (SD=6.19). Children with ASD were predominately male (86.2%) and white, non-Hispanic (76.7%). Crossed-lagged model results indicated bidirectional effects for both mothers and fathers. Warmth in the mother-child relationship and father-child relationship impacted child functioning at earlier time points. In the opposite direction, child functioning impacted father warmth and mother criticism at later time points. Findings indicate that the emotional quality of the parent-child relationships are bidirectionally related to the symptoms and emotional and behavioral problems of children with ASD. Important implications for supporting families are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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8. Psychological Well‐Being and Parent‐Child Relationship Quality in Relation to Child Autism: An Actor‐Partner Modeling Approach.
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Hickey, Emily J., Hartley, Sigan L., and Papp, Lauren
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AUTISM , *MENTAL depression risk factors , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *CRITICISM , *EMOTIONS , *FATHER-child relationship , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *MATHEMATICAL models , *MOTHER-child relationship , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *PARENT-child relationships , *PARENTS of children with disabilities , *PSYCHOLOGY , *RISK assessment , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *WELL-being , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *DATA analysis software , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Parents of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) often report poor psychological well‐being, including a high level of parenting stress and depressive symptoms. Little is known about the extent to which poor parent psychological well‐being alters the emotional quality of the parent‐child relationship in a context of child ASD. This study examined the association between actor (one's own) and partner (one's partner's) level of parenting stress and depressive symptoms and the emotional quality of the parent‐child relationship using a Five Minute Speech Sample (FMSS) in 150 families of children with ASD, aged 5–12 years (85.7% male). Mothers and fathers were aged 38.69 (SD = 5.62) and 40.76 (SD = 6.19), respectively; 76% of mothers and 68% of fathers had a college degree. Structural equation modeling, using Analysis of Moment Structures software, was used to test Actor‐Partner Interdependence Models. Results indicated that mother's level of parenting stress and depressive symptoms were associated with her own FMSS Warmth and Criticism toward the child with ASD 12 months later in negative and positive directions. Mother's level of parenting stress was also negatively associated with father's FMSS Warmth toward the child with ASD 12 months later. Finally, father's level of parenting stress was positively associated with his FMSS Criticism toward the child with ASD. Overall, findings indicate that the mother‐child and father‐child relationship are both impacted by parent psychological well‐being in families of children with ASD; however, actor effects are stronger for mothers and partner effects were only found for fathers. Implications for interventions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Family Emotional Climate and Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
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Hickey, Emily J., Nix, Robert L., and Hartley, Sigan L.
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AUTISM , *CRITICISM , *EMOTIONS , *LATENT structure analysis , *PARENT-child relationships , *PHENOTYPES , *FAMILY relations - Abstract
Little research has examined family emotional climate in the context of having a child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The goal of the current study was to determine how the emotional quality of family subsystems (parent–child and parent couple relationships, for both mothers and fathers) combine to create various classes of family emotional climate and to identify predictors of class membership in 148 families of children with ASD. The emotional quality of family subsystems was assessed using Five Minute Speech Samples from mothers and fathers. In total, 148 families of children with ASD (86% male) aged 6–13 years were included in analyses. About one-third of parents did not have a college degree and more than two-thirds were of non-Hispanic White origin. Latent class analysis revealed that 43% of the sample was characterized by high levels of warmth and low levels of criticism in both the parent–child and parent couple relationships; 12% of the sample was characterized by low warmth and high criticism in both sets of relationships; and the rest of the sample was divided among three additional classes of emotional climate characterized by different configurations of warmth and criticism across both sets of relationships. Parent level of broader autism phenotype and child emotional and behavioral problems were associated with emotional climate class membership. Implications for interventions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Prospective Associations between Maternal Self-Sacrifice/Overprotection and Child Adjustment: Mediation by Insensitive Parenting.
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Khafi, Tamar Y., Borelli, Jessica L., and Yates, Tuppett M.
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SELF-sacrifice , *PARENTAL overprotection , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *CHILD development , *EMOTIONS , *MOTHER-child relationship , *MOTHERHOOD , *PARENTING , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Prior research on Expressed Emotion (EE) in parents' Five Minute Speech Samples (FMSS) suggests that parental attitudes that are overprotective or blur boundaries between the parent and child (i.e., the criteria for self-sacrifice/overprotection; SSOP) are related to increases in children's behavior problems. Some theorists contend that parents who demonstrate high levels of SSOP treat their children more insensitively, but others argue that SSOP does not result in insensitive parenting during the early childhood years. To date, there is no evidence that can be brought to bear upon this tension within the field regarding the developmental implications of SSOP in childhood. This longitudinal investigation of 223 child-mother dyads (47.9% female; Mage_W1 = 49.08 months; 56.5% Hispanic/Latina) evaluated whether maternal insensitivity at age 6 mediated the link between mothers' SSOP with respect to their 4-year-old children and children's behavior problems (i.e., internalizing, attention/hyperactivity) at age 8. A path analysis revealed significant indirect pathways from mothers' SSOP during the preschool period to children's increased internalizing and attention/hyperactivity problems at age 8 via elevated maternal insensitivity at age 6. These associations did not differ significantly across groups as a function of child gender, maternal race/ethnicity, single-mother status, or family poverty. FMSS evaluations of SSOP may offer a culturally valid and clinically valuable screening tool to detect parental attitudes that confer elevated risks for insensitive parenting practices and later child adjustment difficulties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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11. Associations among mothers' representations of their relationship with their toddlers, maternal parenting stress, and toddlers' internalizing and externalizing behaviors.
- Author
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Sher-Censor, Efrat, Shulman, Cory, and Cohen, Esther
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PARENTING Stress Index , *PSYCHOLOGY of toddlers , *MOTHER-child relationship , *EXTERNALIZING behavior - Abstract
This study examined the array of associations among the emotional valence and the coherence of mothers' representations of their relationship with their toddlers, mothers' reported parenting stress, and toddlers' internalizing and externalizing behaviors. To evaluate maternal representations, 55 mothers were interviewed using the Five Minute Speech Sample procedure (FMSS; Magaña et al., 1986), which was coded for criticism and positive comments (Magaňa-Amato, 1993), as well as coherence (Sher-Censor & Yates, 2015). Mothers also completed the Parenting Stress Index - Short Form (PSI; Abidin, 1997) to evaluate their parenting stress and the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL/1.5-5; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000) to assess their toddlers' internalizing and externalizing behaviors. Results indicated that parenting stress was associated with maternal criticism and fewer positive comments in the FMSS, but not with the coherence of mothers' FMSS. Parenting stress, criticism, and lower coherence in the FMSS were associated with maternal reports of externalizing behaviors. Only parenting stress and lower coherence in the FMSS were related to mothers' reports of internalizing behaviors of the child. Thus, the emotional valence and the coherence of mothers' representations of their relationship with their child and parenting stress may each constitute a distinct aspect of parenting and contribute to the understanding of individual differences in toddlers' internalizing and externalizing behaviors. Implications for research and practice with families of toddlers are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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12. Expressed Emotion in Families of Children With and Without Autism Spectrum Disorder, Cerebral Palsy and Down Syndrome: Relations with Parenting Stress and Parenting Behaviors
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Petra Warreyn, Sarah De Pauw, Lana De Clercq, Lisa Dieleman, Bart Soenens, Peter Prinzie, and Clinical Psychology
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YOUNG-CHILDREN ,Down syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,SYMPTOMS ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Social Sciences ,Five Minute Speech Sample ,Developmental psychology ,Cerebral palsy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,ADOLESCENTS ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Expressed emotion ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,RELATIONSHIP QUALITY ,Cerebral Palsy ,MOTHERS ,Public health ,05 social sciences ,DEVELOPMENTAL-DISABILITIES ,PSYCHOPATHOLOGY ,ADULTS ,medicine.disease ,Expressed Emotion ,PERSPECTIVES ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Criticism ,Autism ,Down Syndrome ,FATHERS ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Psychopathology - Abstract
This study examined the family emotional climate as assessed by Five Minute Speech Samples and the relation with parenting stress and parenting behaviors among parents of children (6–17 years, 64.7% boys) with autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, and without any known disability (n = 447). The large majority of parents (79%) showed low levels of Expressed Emotion, an indicator of a positive family climate. In all groups, more Emotional Over-involvement, more Criticism and fewer expressions of Warmth were associated with higher levels of parenting stress. Across groups, Emotional Over-involvement was related to more autonomy-supportive parenting, Criticism to more psychologically controlling and overreactive parenting, and Warmth was associated with more responsive and less psychologically controlling and overreactive parenting.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Vasopressin and parental expressed emotion in the transition to fatherhood
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Jurriaan Witteman, Marinus H. van IJzendoorn, Anna M. Lotz, Willemijn M. Meijer, Jolien Rijlaarsdam, Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg, Kim van Dijk, Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Educational Studies, Clinical Child and Family Studies, LEARN! - Child rearing, and Educational and Family Studies
- Subjects
Male ,Vasopressin ,Vasopressins ,vasopressin ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Five Minute Speech Sample ,050109 social psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Fathers ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Expressed emotion ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Prosody ,Child ,media_common ,Parenting ,Transition (fiction) ,05 social sciences ,paternal sensitivity ,Child development ,Object Attachment ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Expressed Emotion ,Feeling ,Emotional prosody ,Psychology ,emotional prosody ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
In the last decades, parenting researchers increasingly focused on the role of fathers in child development. However, it is still largely unknown which factors contribute to fathers’ beliefs about their child, which may be crucial in the transition to fatherhood. In the current randomized within-subject experiment, the effect of nasal administration of vasopressin (AVP) on both Five Minute Speech Sample-based (FMSS) expressed emotion and emotional content or prosody was explored in 25 prospectivefathers. Moreover, we explored how the transition to fatherhood affected these FMSS-based parameters, using prenatal and early postnatal measurements. Analyses revealed that FMSS-based expressed emotion and emotional content were correlated, but not affected by prenatal AVP administration. However,child’s birth was associated with an increase in positivity and a decrease in emotional prosody, suggesting that the child’s birth is more influential with regard to paternal thoughts and feelings than prenatal AVP administration.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The Five Minute Speech Sample as a Measure of Parent-Child Dynamics: Evidence from Observational Research.
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Weston, Stephanie, Hawes, David, and Pasalich, David
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CHILD development , *MEDLINE , *META-analysis , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PARENT-child relationships , *PARENTING , *QUALITY assurance , *SPEECH evaluation , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Use of the Five Minute Speech Sample in parenting research has become increasingly widespread in recent years, raising important questions about how it maps onto other more established methods for assessing parent-child dynamics. Given the historical emphasis on direct observation as a gold standard in such assessment, our aim was to examine associations between the Five Minute Speech Sample and direct observational coding of parent-child interactions, and to evaluate the assumption that the Five Minute Speech Sample reflects moment-to-moment exchanges between parents and children. A systematic search of three databases conducted identified 25 relevant studies (total N = 2945 child participants). These studies focused largely on four distinct systems for coding the Five Minute Speech Sample, and reported on distinct developmental periods ranging from infancy (17 months) through to adolescence (17 years). In 20 of 25 studies, the Five Minute Speech Sample was significantly associated with observations of parent-child interactions. These associations were apparent in all age groups examined, yet findings for fathers were somewhat more mixed than mothers. Available evidence suggests that the Five Minute Speech Sample holds strong potential as a brief but richly informative tool for indexing parent-child dynamics-particularly affective dimensions of the parent-child relationship-in both research and clinical contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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15. Preschoolers' Self-Regulation Moderates Relations Between Mothers' Representations and Children's Adjustment to School.
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Sher-Censor, Efrat, Khafi, Tamar Y., and Yates, Tuppett M.
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BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *CHI-squared test , *CHILD development , *EGO (Psychology) , *INTELLIGENCE tests , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MOTHERHOOD , *PARENTING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *AFFINITY groups , *SOCIAL adjustment in children , *NARRATIVES , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ONE-way analysis of variance - Abstract
Consistent with models of environmental sensitivity (Pluess, 2015), research suggests that the effects of parents' behaviors on child adjustment are stronger among children who struggle to regulate their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors compared with children with better self-regulation. This study extended prior research by assessing maternal representations of the child, which presumably underlie mothers' parenting behaviors, to evaluate the moderating influence of preschoolers' self-regulation on relations between mothers' representations and changes in children's negative and positive developmental adjustment outcomes from preschool to first grade. Participants were 187 mothers and their preschoolers. Mothers' representations were assessed via the coherence of their verbal narratives regarding their preschooler and teachers reported on preschoolers' self-regulation. In preschool and first grade, examiners rated children's externalizing behavior problems and ego-resilience, and teachers rated children's externalizing behavior problems and peer acceptance. Consistent with the environmental sensitivity framework, the coherence of mothers' narratives predicted changes in adjustment among children with self-regulation difficulties, but not among children with better self-regulation. Preschoolers with self-regulation difficulties whose mothers produced incoherent narratives showed increased externalizing behavior problems, decreased ego-resilience, and lower peer acceptance across the transition to school. In contrast, preschoolers with better self-regulation did not evidence such effects when their mothers produced incoherent narratives. The implications of these findings for understanding and supporting children's adjustment during the early school years are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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16. The Meaning of Emotional Overinvolvement in Early Development: Prospective Relations With Child Behavior Problems.
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Khafi, Tamar Y., Yates, Tuppett M., and Sher-Censor, Efrat
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EMOTIONS , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *CHILD psychopathology , *PSYCHOLOGY of preschool children , *SPEECHES, addresses, etc. , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CHILD Behavior Checklist , *CHILD development , *DEMOGRAPHY , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MOTHER-child relationship , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *PARENTING , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Emotional overinvolvement (EOI) in parents’ Five Minute Speech Samples (FMSSs; Magaña-Amato, 1993) is thought to measure overconcern and enmeshment with one’s child. Although related to maladaptive outcomes in studies of adult children, FMSS EOI evidences varied relations with behavior problems in studies with young children. These mixed findings may indicate that certain FMSS EOI criteria reflect inappropriate and excessive involvement with adult children, but do not indicate maladaptive processes when parenting younger children. Thus, this study evaluated relations of each FMSS EOI criterion with changes in child behavior problems from preschool to first grade in a community sample of 223 child–mother dyads (47.98% female; Wave 1 M(age) 49.08 months; 56.50% Hispanic/Latina). Maternal FMSS EOI ratings were obtained at Wave 1, and independent examiners rated child externalizing and internalizing behavior problems at Wave 1 and again 2 years later. Path analyses indicated that both the self-sacrifice/overprotection (SSOP) and statements of attitude (SOAs) FMSS EOI criteria predicted increased externalizing problems. In contrast, excessive detail and exaggerated praise were not related to child externalizing behavior problems, and Emotional Display was not evident in this sample. None of the FMSS EOI criteria evidenced significant relations with internalizing behavior problems. Multigroup comparisons indicated that the effect of SOAs on externalizing behavior problems was significant for boys but not for girls, and there were no significant group differences by race/ethnicity. These findings point to the salience of SSOP and SOAs for understanding the developmental significance of EOI in early development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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17. Parenting a Child with Autism in India: Narratives Before and After a Parent-Child Intervention Program.
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Brezis, Rachel, Weisner, Thomas, Daley, Tamara, Singhal, Nidhi, Barua, Merry, and Chollera, Shreya
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PARENTS of autistic children , *AUTISM in children , *BEHAVIOR modification , *YOUTH with autism spectrum disorders , *HUMAN services , *TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL conditions in India ,TREATMENT of autism in children ,KULA (Families) - Abstract
In many low and middle income countries where autism-related resources are scarce, interventions must rely on family and parents. A 3-month Parent-Child Training Program (PCTP) at Action For Autism, New Delhi, India is aimed at empowering and educating parents, encouraging acceptance of their child, and decreasing parent stress. Forty couples were asked to describe their child with autism using the Five Minute Speech Sample (FMSS), an open-ended narrative method, before and after the program. Parents described a wide range of child behaviors, primarily social and cognitive skills. While all families were of a relatively affluent strata compared to the general Indian population, there were nonetheless significant differences in parents' narratives based on their income levels. Coming into the program, parents with relatively less income focused on their child's immediate and material needs, while higher income parents discussed their parental roles and vision for society. After the PCTP, parents were more likely to reflect on their child beyond comparisons to 'normality,' and beyond the here-and-now. Mothers were more likely than fathers to reflect on themselves and their relationships with their child. Understanding parents' experiences and narratives is essential for the evaluation of interventions such as the PCTP, as Indian parents are incorporated into a growing global network of 'parents of children with autism.' [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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18. Vasopressin and parental expressed emotion in the transition to fatherhood
- Author
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Lotz, A.M. (Anna M.), Rijlaarsdam, J. (Jolien), Witteman, J. (Jurriaan), Meijer, W. (Willemijn), van Dijk, K. (Kim), IJzendoorn, M.H. (Rien) van, Bakermans-Kranenburg, M.J. (Marian), Lotz, A.M. (Anna M.), Rijlaarsdam, J. (Jolien), Witteman, J. (Jurriaan), Meijer, W. (Willemijn), van Dijk, K. (Kim), IJzendoorn, M.H. (Rien) van, and Bakermans-Kranenburg, M.J. (Marian)
- Abstract
In the last decades, parenting researchers increasingly focused on the role of fathers in child development. However, it is still largely unknown which factors contribute to fathers’ beliefs about their child, which may be crucial in the transition to fatherhood. In the current randomized within-subject experiment, the effect of nasal administration of vasopressin (AVP) on both Five Minute Speech Sample-based (FMSS) expressed emotion and emotional content or prosody was explored in 25 prospectivefathers. Moreover, we explored how the transition to fatherhood affected these FMSS-based parameters, using prenatal and early postnatal measurements. Analyses revealed that FMSS-based expressed emotion and emotional content were correlated, but not affected by prenatal AVP administration. However,child’s birth was associated with an increase in positivity and a decrease in emotional prosody, suggesting that the child’s birth is more influential with regard to paternal thoughts and feelings than prenatal AVP administration.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood: Primiparous parents' representations of their child in relation to parental sensitivity.
- Author
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Branger, Marjolein C.E., Emmen, Rosanneke A.G., Woudstra, Mi-lan J., Alink, Lenneke R.A., and Mesman, Judi
- Subjects
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PARENTHOOD , *PARENTS , *SAMPLING (Process) , *PARENTING , *NARRATIVES - Abstract
Narrative coherence reflects parents' ability to provide a believable, clear, relevant, and internally consistent story about their child. Parents demonstrating more narrative coherence have been theorized to show higher parental sensitivity, but this has not been examined in a normative sample, nor across the transition to parenthood, and only once in fathers. The aim of this study was to examine stability and change in narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood in mothers and fathers, as well as the relation between pre- and postnatal narrative coherence and postnatal parental sensitivity. The sample consisted of 105 primiparous expecting parents. Narrative coherence was measured at 36-weeks pregnancy and when the child was 4 months old, using the Five Minute Speech Sample procedure. Parental sensitivity was observed in three episodes. Results demonstrated that narrative coherence was moderately stable (correlations) across the transition to parenthood in fathers only. Both mothers' and fathers' narrative coherence improved over time. Furthermore, mothers and fathers were overall equally coherent, and maternal and paternal narrative coherence were positively interrelated during pregnancy only. Lastly, our findings showed weak evidence for the theorized link between narrative coherence and parental sensitivity: only postnatal narrative coherence predicted paternal sensitivity, only during free play. Our findings give new insight in the development of narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood, and how it relates to actual parenting. More research is needed to confirm our findings and further explore this topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Emotional Flooding and Relational Schemas in Families with Early Childhood Conduct Problems
- Author
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Weston, Stephanie
- Subjects
FMSS ,emotional flooding ,parenting ,conduct problems ,five minute speech sample ,relational schemas - Abstract
It is now well established that dysfunctional parenting is associated with the development and maintenance of conduct problems, beginning in early childhood. However, the cognitive and affective processes that contribute to dysfunctional parenting in early childhood remain poorly understood. Two constructs that appear to play important roles in this regard are emotional flooding and relational schemas. Emotional flooding is the tendency to experience another’s negative emotion as unpredictable, overwhelming, and disorganising. Relational schemas refer to cognitive structures and affective attitudes representing patterns of interpersonal relatedness. One of the most rigorous methods available for assessing these schemas is the independent coding of parent speech using the Five Minute Speech Sample (FMSS). Although both emotional flooding and negative relational schemas have been associated with conduct problems, little is known about how these processes relate to one another, or may combine to jointly shape parenting problems. The broad aim of the research presented in this thesis was to examine emotional flooding and relational schemas as cognitive-affective correlates of negative parenting in families at risk for early childhood conduct problems. First, given growing interest in the FMSS as a measure of relational schemas and other parent-child processes, a systematic review was conducted to evaluate measurement properties of the FMSS in terms of its associations with observational indices of parent-child interactions. This review identified 25 studies (involving a total of N = 2945 child participants), 20 of which reported significant associations between the FMSS and observed parent-child interaction. Second, an empirical study was conducted to test for associations between emotional flooding, relational schemas, and parenting practices. Data from parental self-reports and independent coding were collected in samples of typically-developing children (n = 73) and those with clinic-referred conduct problems (n = 85). As predicted, parental flooding and relational schemas were found to be significantly related to one another. Furthermore, both flooding and negative relational schemas were found to occur at significantly higher levels among parents of children with clinic-referred conduct problems compared to those of typically-developing children. In multivariate analyses, emotional flooding was found to predict some self-reported and observed parenting practices independently of parents’ global negative affective state (e.g., depression, stress , and anxiety), however relational schemas was not. The implications of these findings are discussed in relation to family-based models of early childhood conduct problems and parenting interventions for conduct problems in this period.
- Published
- 2016
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