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Maternal depressive symptoms and child temperament: Longitudinal associations with executive functioning
Authors:Michelle Comas  Kristin Valentino  John G. Borkowski
Affiliation:Center for Children and Families, Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame, 1602 North Ironwood Drive, South Bend, IN 46635, USA
Abstract:The present study investigated the contributions of maternal depressive symptoms and child temperament to youths' executive functioning (EF) across an 18-year longitudinal study. The primary hypothesis proposed that the association between youths' exposure to early maternal depressive symptoms (ages 3 & 5) and their EF (age 18) would be moderated by temperament in middle childhood (ages 8 & 10). Temperament was a significant moderator of the association between early maternal depressive symptoms and youth EF. Positive child temperament (high effortful control, EC, and low negative affectivity, NA) was associated with higher EF when maternal depressive symptoms during early childhood were low. In contrast, elevated maternal depressive symptoms overrode any associations between child temperament and later EF. Parallel analyses examining the interaction between child temperament and maternal depressive symptoms during middle childhood (controlling for earlier maternal depressive symptoms) revealed a different pattern of results. Clinical implications for prevention/intervention work on EF are discussed.
Keywords:Maternal depressive symptoms   Adolescent parenting   Child temperament   Executive functioning
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