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Observational Context of Mother-Child Interaction: Impact of a stress Context on Emotional Availability
Authors:Katja Dittrich  Anna Fuchs  Daniel Führer  Felix Bermpohl  Dorothea Kluczniok  Catherine Hindi Attar  Charlotte Jaite  Anna-Lena Zietlow  Maria Licata  Corinna Reck  Sabine C. Herpertz  Romuald Brunner  Eva Möhler  Franz Resch  Sibylle Maria Winter  Ulrike Lehmkuhl  Katja Bödeker
Affiliation:1.Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy,Charité - Universit?tsmedizin Berlin,Berlin,Germany;2.Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Centre for Psychosocial Medicine,University Hospital Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany;3.Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy,Charité – Universit?tsmedizin Berlin,Berlin,Germany;4.Institute of Medical Psychology, Centre for Psychosocial Medicine,University Hospital Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany;5.Department of Social Pediatrics,Technical University,Munich,Germany;6.Department of Child and Adolescent Clinical Psychology and Counseling Psychology,Ludwig-Maximilian University,Munich,Germany;7.Department of General Psychiatry, Center for Psychosocial Medicine,University Hospital Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany
Abstract:Previous studies have found that a stressful observational context challenges the mother-child relationship, thus highlighting negative interactive behavior. However, the impact of observational context has only been investigated in infants and preschoolers without specifically using the Emotional Availability Scales. Nor have they explored whether the association of mother-child interaction with children’s emotional or behavioral problems depends on the observational context. We observed 140 mothers and their five to 12-year-old children in non-stressful free play and in a stressful task context. In general, dyads showed higher emotional availability in the task context compared to the free play. Specifically, mothers showed higher levels of Sensitivity, Structuring and Nonhostility, but lower levels of Nonintrusiveness during the task compared to the free play context; children showed higher levels of Responsiveness during the task than during free play. After controlling for dyadic stress, contextual effects decreased for all dimensions of emotional availability. The association of mother-child interaction with child problem behavior depended on the observational context. Specifically, we found maternal emotional availability during free play to be more strongly associated with child problem behavior than during the stressful task; however, emotional availability of the child was more strongly associated with problem behavior when obtained during the task. We conclude that context impacts on mother-child interactive behavior and also on the association of mother-child-interaction and child behavior. Stress is a relevant contextual factor influencing mother-child interactive behavior.
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