Correlates of Parent-Child Physiological Synchrony and Emotional Parenting: Differential Associations in Varying Interactive Contexts
Abstract
© 2019, The Author(s). Objectives: Parent-child synchrony during interaction might
possess important features that underlie parenting processes throughout development.
However, little is known regarding the association between parent-child physiological
synchrony and emotional parenting behaviors during middle childhood. The main goal
of the study was to examine whether emotional parenting was positively or negatively
associated with parent-child physiological synchrony for school-age children. Methods:
Adopting a biopsychosocial perspective, we incorporated the interbeat interval (IBI)
and behavioral observation data of 150 parent-child dyads (child M age = 8.77, SD=
1.80) to explore the patterns of moment-to-moment dyadic physiological synchrony and
to investigate whether these patterns were associated with two emotional parenting
behaviors (psychological control and psychological unavailability). Results: Our findings
provided some initial evidence that in low to moderately stressful situations that
mimic daily parent-child interaction, parent-child physiological synchrony was indicative
of different emotional parenting behaviors in various parent-child interactive situations.
Specifically, in the collaborative context (parent-child working together to complete
a task), parent-child physiological synchrony was indicative of less psychological
unavailability, whereas in the competitive context (parent-child resolving disagreement
with each other), parent-child physiological synchrony was indicative of less psychological
control. The study implications and future research directions are discussed. Conclusions:
Overall, our findings suggested that dyadic physiological synchrony, indexed by parent-child
moment-to-moment matching of IBI, was associated with fewer negative emotional parenting
behaviors.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Social SciencesScience & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Family Studies
Psychology, Developmental
Psychiatry
Psychology
physiological synchrony
IBI
emotional parenting
psychological control
psychological unavailability
INFANT SYNCHRONY
BEHAVIORAL SYNCHRONY
MOTHER
MODEL
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20227Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1007/s10826-019-01337-4Publication Info
Han, ZR; Gao, MM; Yan, J; Hu, X; Zhou, W; & Li, X (2019). Correlates of Parent-Child Physiological Synchrony and Emotional Parenting: Differential
Associations in Varying Interactive Contexts. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 28(4). pp. 1116-1123. 10.1007/s10826-019-01337-4. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20227.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Wen Zhou
Assistant Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke Kunshan University
Wen Zhou is an assistant professor of Evolutionary Anthropology. She holds a secondary
appointment with the department of Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke university. Professor
Zhou aims to understand what it means to be a human and the moral status a human is
believed to deserve. Her current projects focus on dehumanization and its developmental
origins. Her work also involves research on social hierarchy, human-animal relations
and conservation, deploying an interdisciplinary approach draw

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