Higher maternal parasympathetic activity was linked to greater autonomy support, while sympathetic dominance was associated with higher control during mother-youth conversations.
Mothers' autonomic nervous system functioning is associated with their autonomy-relevant parenting behaviors during conversations with their early adolescent children.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
ABSTRACT Because autonomy‐relevant parenting has implications for early adolescent development, understanding correlates of parenting may be important. The current study investigated mothers’ independent and joint autonomic nervous system functioning (parasympathetic, sympathetic) in relation to their observed parenting behaviors—autonomy support and control—during a mother–youth conversation task about youth peer problems. With a sample of 100 mothers ( M age = 41.25 years, SD = 6.22) of 10‐ to 12‐year‐olds, results revealed one direct effect such that higher parasympathetic activity was associated with higher observed autonomy support. For joint effects, sympathetic dominance (high sympathetic, low parasympathetic) was linked with higher observed control, whereas co‐inhibition (low parasympathetic and sympathetic) was associated with lower observed control. The consideration of multiple branches of autonomic functioning provides new insights about the link between physiology and parenting behaviors during mother–youth conversations.
Cai et al. (Mon,) reported a other. Higher maternal parasympathetic activity was linked to greater autonomy support, while sympathetic dominance was associated with higher control during mother-youth conversations.
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