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The origins of explanatory style : closeness to parent or negative life eventsSites, Teresa L. January 1988 (has links)
The Reformulated theory of learned helplessness emphasizes maladaptive explanatory style and its influence on depression, achievement, health, and coping. Individuals who habitually explain unpleasant/uncontrollable events by internal, stable and global causes (and good events by external, unstable, specific causes) are said to have a maladaptive explanatory style. Researchers speculate that negative life events (such as parental divorce or death) contribute to the development of this style. Researchers have sought to explain adjustment-related difficulties by focusing on traumatic life events, such as divorce or death of a parent and their adverse effects on childhood development.Literature concerning the correlates of father absence, divorce, parental death, attachment and stressful life events shows that closeness to parents can mediate the impact of these events on adjustment and development. The mediating effects of closeness to parent may explain why not all children who experience these events actually develop maladaptive explanatory styles.This investigation examined the relations between Negative Life Events, Closeness to Parent and Explanatory Style. By looking at these relations, we can determine which variable is more influential in developing the maladaptive style. It was expected that Closeness to Parent would be a better predictor of explanatory style than Negative Life Events.Participants were 86 college students who completed a questionnaire that assessed explanatory style, closeness to parent, negative life events, and level of depression. Multiple regression was used to determine the significant predictors of explanatory style and depression. Results showed that none of the variables were significant predictors of explanatory style. Recent life events, closeness to mother and explanatory style were significant predictors of depression. Discriminant analysis was used to determine whether participants whose parents were divorced could be differentiated from those whose parent's marriage was intact using explanatory style, closeness to parent and depression as predictors. Results showed no significant differences between these groups. Sample group means for depression and life events were higher than those from normative studies for the Beck Depression Inventory and the Life Experience Survey.As the literature showed, closeness to parent and negative life events should account for some of the variance in the maladaptive style. The absence of these relations may be attributed to theoretical and methodological issues concerning closeness to parent and explanatory style.However, since this sample had high levels of depression and life stress, theoretically these relations should have been found. This points to the importance of the problems discussed.Prospective longitudinal studies, although costly and time consuming may be useful in determining the antecedents of a maladaptive explanatory style. / Department of Psychological Science
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The effect of Satir brief therapy on patients in a maternity hospitalCohen, Bertha 31 December 2006 (has links)
As no known research has been done on Satir brief therapy in a maternity setting, an exploratory design using the case study method was used to assess whether women in a maternity hospital experience this form of therapy as beneficial.
Purposive sampling was used to obtain a sample of five patients for this study.
Therapeutic sessions were held with these women during their stay in hospital, and follow up sessions with four of the five women were held once they had been discharged home to evaluate their experience of the therapy. The fifth woman could not be reached after her discharge from hospital. The results indicate that the use of Satir brief therapy supports the research question and that it can therefore be used to address the psychological and social issues which can affect the mother baby dyad, thus promoting healthy mother - baby bonding. / Social Work / M.A.(Social Science)
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A desafetação no olhar da psicanálise: a função materna e a relação mãe-bebeSimões, Fátima Itsue Watanabe [UNESP] 14 September 2012 (has links) (PDF)
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simoes_fiw_dr_assis.pdf: 584524 bytes, checksum: 745e0cdd317f4d59ee2416524b84007f (MD5) / Este estudo toma por objeto principal de investigação as relações familiares estabelecidas entre a mãe e o bebê e o desencadeamento do distúrbio da desafetação. Joyce McDougall (1989), psicanalista de origem neo-zelandesa, radicada na França, cria o termo desafetação para fazer menção a um distúrbio da economia afetiva, que leva a um modo de funcionamento do aparelho psíquico que tende a fazer desaparecer do psiquismo, mediante a expulsão do plano consciente, os pensamentos, fantasias e representações associadas a afetos que podem suscitar algum tipo de sofrimento. O indivíduo tende a ejetar através de atos e não do trabalho mental os conteúdos dolorosos. É como se o indivíduo precisasse agir compulsivamente sobre o corpo para se livrar da dor psíquica. Estes conteúdos não possuem valor simbólico e equivaleriam a uma compensação pela impossibilidade de se pôr em marcha o processo de simbolização. Esse distúrbio seria o resultado de “falhas” na relação mãe-bebê num período precoce do desenvolvimento. Sendo assim, esta pesquisa focalizará os primórdios do desenvolvimento de um indivíduo, considerando ser através da mãe que a criança é inscrita no mundo da cultura e da civilização. Nesse período assentam-se as bases para a estabilidade emocional do ser humano e oferecem-se as condições necessárias para que a sua trajetória transcorra de maneira satisfatória. Dessa perspectiva, outras formulações atravessaram o trabalho: qual a dinâmica de funcionamento psíquico estabelecida nos primórdios do desenvolvimento infantil que diz respeito ao distúrbio da desafetação? Qual o papel que a família desempenha para esse padrão de funcionamento psíquico? Seria a desafetação uma patologia característica das famílias na atualidade? Esta pesquisa de caráter teórico-reflexivo tem como... / This study has as its main object the close exam of the familiar relationships established between the mother and the baby and the act of unleash the disaffection disturbance. Joyce MacDougall (1989), psychoanalyst from New Zealand, who lived in France, created the term disaffection to mention the disturbance of affective economy, that leads to an operation way of the psychic apparatus that is apt to disappear of the psychism, through the expulsion of the conscious plan, the thoughts, the fantasies and the representations related to the affections that can give rise to a kind of pain. The person is apt to eject through the acts and not through the mental work the painful subjects. It is as the person needed to act compulsively on the body to get rid of psychological pain. These subjects don’t have a symbolical value and it would be equal to a compensation for the impossibility of applying the symbolization process. This disturbance would be the result of “absences” in the relationship between mother-baby in a precocious period of the development. Thus, this research will focus on the beginning of an individual development, considering that it is through the mother that the child is inserted in the culture and civilization world. In this period, the basis is established to the human being’s emotional stability and it provides the necessary conditions to a satisfactory trajectory. From this perspective, other formulations permeated the work: what is the dynamic of the psychic functioning established in the beginning of the child development that concerns the disaffection disturbance? What is the role the family plays to this psychic functioning pattern? Would it be the disaffection a peculiar pathology of the families today? This theoretical reflexive research has its basis in the Psychoanalysis and the Psychosomatic and it aims to contribute to... (Complete abstract click electronic access below
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A comparison of grandmothers' and grandfathers' stress in raising their grandchildrenAttruia, Mia Lucero, Morrow, Doris Lorraine. 01 January 2002 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to build on previous descriptive research on grandparents' experiences of stress in raising their grandchildren. The research method used was a qualitative approach. The goal in utilizing a qualitative approach lay in a desire to understand the unique stress experience of grandfathers and grandmothers in raising their grandchildren, as they live it and feel it.
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Who makes the choice?: rethinking the roles of self-determination and relatedness in Chinese children's motivationBao, Xuehua., 包雪華. January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / Psychology / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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A Canonical Correlational Analysis Exploring Characteristics of Children Presenting to Counseling for Grief and LossEner, Liz D. 08 1900 (has links)
To date, researchers who have explored the complexity of childhood bereavement have utilized unstandardized assessment instruments and/or have independently evaluated specific constructs rather than factoring in the dimensionality of loss. The purpose of this study was to use parents' completion of established instruments--the Child Behavior Checklist and the Parenting Stress Index--to examine the multivariate shared relationship between characteristics of bereaved children referred for counseling--their ages, genders, ethnicities, types of loss, and life stressors--and their behavioral manifestations as well as the relationship between these characteristics and levels of parent-child relational stress. Utilizing archival clinical files, I examined these characteristics from bereaved children (N = 98) whose parents sought counseling services from two university-based counseling clinics. The sample consisted of 67 boys and 31 girls between the ages 3 and 11 years old (M = 6.28). The majority of participants (67%, n = 66) identified as Caucasian, 10% (n = 10) as African American, 10% (n = 10) as Hispanic/Latino, 6% as Bi-racial (n = 6), 4% as Native American (n = 4), and 2% as Asian (n = 2). A canonical correlational analyses (CCA) was conducted to examine relationship between characteristics of children and their subsequent behavioral manifestations. The full model was found to be statistically significant using the Wilks’s λ = .611 criterion, F(25, 328.41) = 1.862, p = .008. The R2 type effect size was .389, which indicates the full model explains about 39% of the variance shared between the two variable sets. A second CCA was conducted to explore the relationship between characteristics of bereaved children and levels of parent-child relational stress. The full model was found statistically to be significant using the Wilks’s λ = .790 criterion, F(10, 154) = 1.926, p = .045. The R2 type effect size was .210, which indicates the full model explains about 21% of the variance shared between the two variable sets. Overall, correlational findings from this study provided insight into bereaved children’s manifestations of loss and levels of parent-child relational stress as contingent upon specific characteristics. Specifically, results indicated a strong relationship between age and bereaved children’s behavioral manifestations. This finding reinforced the importance for clinicians to understand developmental implications when working with bereaved children. Furthermore, caregivers who reported minimal overall external stressors also reported less parent-child relational interference. This finding further emphasizes the importance for caregivers to maintain utmost stability for bereaved children.
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Differences in Parenting Stress Between Parents of Children with ADHD, Children with Internalizing Behavior Problems, and Non-Referred ChildrenConte, Deborah A. (Deborah Ann) 12 1900 (has links)
Recently, researchers have begun to explore the associated impacts of ADHD on parent and family functioning, with an increasing focus on parenting stress. Accumulating empirical evidence is mixed, suggesting that parents of children with ADHD report increased levels of parenting stress when compared to parents of children with learning disabilities, and parents of non-referred children, but report equally stressful parenting levels when compared to parents of children with externalizing behavior problems. Results of the present study comparing reported parenting stress levels between
parents of children with ADHD, children with internalizing behavior problems, and nonreferred children, were partially supportive of results found in past studies indicating higher levels of parenting stress among parents of children with ADHD. However, strong gender effects were found between mothers and fathers, which mediated the overall results.
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Factors contributing to stress in parents of children diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.Prithivirajh, Yashica. January 2005 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate which factors contributed to stress in parents
of children diagnosed with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). The
influence of the parents' gender on these stress factors as well as the way in which
parents conceptualised extreme stress/burnout were also explored.
This study focused on parents whose children have been diagnosed with this disorder and
attend the grade two classes at this special school. Thirty seven parents completed a
survey questionnaire and semi-structured interviews were conducted with 10 of these
parents. The researcher was able to determine which specific factors contributed to these
parents' stress relating to parenting their ADHD child and also explored parents'
conceptions of stress. The data was quantitatively and qualitatively analysed. The semistructured
interviews explored the parents' subjective stress experiences with their
ADHD children and encouraged possible solutions from parents. Gender differences
were also explored. The responses to the interviews were qualitatively analysed.
The results of this study have indicated that generally, parents perceive extreme
stress/burnout in terms of physical and emotional symptoms. The factors contributing to
extreme stress appeared to be associated with social problems of ADHD children, their
inappropriate behaviours and school-related problems. Many possible solutions were
offered by parents but they also indicated the need for support and understanding from
significant others, such as spouses, teachers, family members, doctors and therapists.
Parents of ADHD children in this study indicated that one's gender does play an
important role regarding how a person copes with stress, with mothers generally
experiencing far more stress than fathers. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2005.
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Filial therapy : a comparison of child-parent relationship therapy and parent-child interaction therapyDuffy, Kathleen M. January 2008 (has links)
Filial therapy, originally developed by Bernard Guerney (1964), is a form of parent child therapy utilizing child-centered skills and limit setting strategies to improve the parent child relationship and to increase positive child behaviors. Parent Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT), developed by Sheila Eyberg (1988), is an empirically supported treatment for improving parenting skills and decreasing negative externalizing behavior with children. Child Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT), developed by Garry Landreth (2002), is an up and coming form of Filial therapy, supported in the literature for improving the parent child relationship and improving the child’s general functioning. Children diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) often present with deficits in their socialization and communication abilities. These deficiencies can cause strain on the parent child relationship because of the challenges inherent to the maladaptive interactions common among families with a child diagnosed with ASD. Therefore, there is a need for effective interventions to improve the functioning between the parent and child. However, a review of the literature discovered a lack of research using Filial therapy with children diagnosed with ASD and no research comparing different forms of Filial therapy. In order to better inform practitioners, the current study utilized qualitative analysis through a deconstructing evidence approach to examine the experience of four participants in either the PCIT or CPRT group. Participants completed pre and post assessments measuring changes in the parent child relationship and their child’s adaptive functioning. The counselors of the group also recorded the parents’ reactions to the group through their weekly progress notes. The results yielded little support for one approach over the other. One participant in the CPRT had a very
successful experience overall, reporting improvement in the parent child relationship and her child’s adaptive functioning. Furthermore, the counselors recorded a more positive reaction from the parents in the CPRT group as compared to the largely neutral or negative reactions from the parents in the PCIT group. However, overall, the study concluded that more research is needed on identifying a clearly superior Filial therapy approach for children diagnosed with ASD. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
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The Relationship Between Prior Maternal Trauma, Emotion Regulation and Maternal Sensitivity and Hostility Among High-Risk Adolescent MothersKotsatos, Anna January 2021 (has links)
Adolescence is a period of rapid development marked by significant neurological and behavioral change. Normative neurological shifts that take place during this stage of life occur in the areas of the brain most associated with response inhibition and emotion regulation which is understood in the context of the observed increases in impulsivity and emotional lability among many adolescents. These facets of development may present unique challenges for those adolescents who enter parenthood ruing this period of life as increasing evidence suggests that emotional and cognitive control are highly related to parenting behavior. Those parents who are better able to modulate their emotional responses are best able to cultivate sensitive and nurturing home environments for their children. Compounding the risk for themselves and their children, adolescent mothers also face a constellation of risk factors including poverty, low educational attainment, elevated levels of stress and high rates of early life trauma exposures. Those adolescent mothers who experience homelessness face additional risk, in part because social support and family involvement have been shown to benefit young parents and their children. A substantive body of literature suggests that these interrelated risk factors may stress the capacity to effectively parent, leading adolescent mothers to be less affectionate, less positive, more hostile and intrusive and less emotionally available when interacting with their children. Consequently, supporting adolescent mothers is of great public health concern as they, and their children, are at risk for a range of non-optimal outcomes.
The aim of this dissertation was to contribute to the current body of literature linking maternal emotion regulation with positive parenting practices among a highly vulnerable sample of homeless adolescent mothers and their children. Specifically, this dissertation used archival data to extend the current understanding of these associations by exploring the ways in which early life exposure to psychological aggression influenced the regulatory capacities and parenting behaviors of a sample of homeless adolescent mothers. To date, few studies have utilized a computerized measure of response control and behavioral inhibition under emotionally salient conditions in conjunction with ecologically valid multiple observer coded video observations of parent-child interactions within this high-risk population.
Participants (N=72) were adolescent mothers and their children living in nine Transitional Living Programs (TLPs) across a Northeastern state, aged 16-22 years old and predominantly Latinx and Black American. On average, participants had one child (M=1.3 years-old). Nearly half of the participants reported a history of foster care or group home involvement. Thirty-two percent of the sample self-reported clinically significant levels of depression and, on average, participants reported slightly elevated levels of anxiety. Consistent with the literature, the sample evidenced significant trauma exposures with participants reporting having experienced an average of three discrete traumatic events. For example, 37.3% reported having experienced physical violence in their home, 72% reported having experienced violence in their community, 45.3% reported having witnessed violence in their community, and 36.3% reported having experienced some form of sexual abuse. Data were collected from the baseline interview of a randomized control trial examining the effectiveness of an intervention designed to increase positive parenting among a sample of adolescent mothers living in TLPs. For this study, interpersonal trauma exposure was operationalized via the Psychological Aggression Scale of the Parent Child Conflict Tactics Scale (Straus, 1999). Maternal sensitivity and hostility were operationalized using the Sensitivity and Non-Hostility scales of the Emotional Availability Scales, 4th edition (EA Scales; Biringen, 2008). Maternal emotion recognition and regulation were operationalized via the Emotion Go/NoGo (EGNG) paradigm. Maternal depression and anxiety were also examined.
Consistent with the literature, this study found evidence for the complex associations between maternal exposure to psychological aggression, maternal emotion regulation and parenting behaviors. Specifically, there was a significant positive association between the accurate discrimination of sad from neutral facial expressions and maternal sensitivity. The accurate discrimination of fearful from neutral facial expressions, however, was associated with less sensitive parenting. Additionally, those mothers who were more impulsive when confronted with sad facial expressions during the EGNG sad emotion “go” task were less sensitive when interacting with their children. This study also found evidence for a significant interaction between maternal exposure to psychological aggression and impulsivity in the EGNG fearful emotion “go” task in the explanation of maternal sensitivity. Specifically, for those adolescent mothers who had experienced psychological aggression, impulsivity when confronted with fearful facial cues on a computerized task was associated with increased maternal sensitivity during dyadic interactions. For those mothers who had not experienced psychological aggression, however, increased impulsivity when confronted with fearful faces on the computerized task was associated with reduced maternal sensitivity.
Maternal exposure to psychological aggression was consistently associated with increased hostility with those mothers who had been exposed to psychological aggression evidencing more hostility when interacting with their children. Finally, in optimal conditions on a computerized task (i.e., when confronted with happy faces during the EGNG paradigm) those mothers who were rated as more sensitive during dyadic interactions all responded within approximately the same amount of time to the computerized stimuli. No relationship between maternal sensitivity and mean response time was found in the negatively valenced EGNG conditions. There was not sufficient evidence to suggest that emotion regulation and behavioral impulsivity mediated the relationship between exposure to psychological aggression and parenting behavior.
Consistent with the literature, these findings suggest a role for both maternal trauma exposure and regulatory capacities in the explanation of parenting behavior. These findings highlight the need for greater research on these complex and multidetermined relationships, particularly within the highly vulnerable adolescent parent population. Additionally, this study’s findings suggest possible avenues for interventions within this population, highlighting the need to consider the ways in which adolescent mothers’ regulatory capacities may influence their ability to intuit and respond to their children. Directions for future research and clinical implications are discussed.
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