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Parents’ Orientation to Emotion, Children’s Emotion Regulation and Internalizing Behavior: A Longitudinal Mediation Model

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Abstract

To date, we have a limited understanding of how parental orientation to children’s emotion (i.e., parents’ awareness/understanding of their children’s emotions) influences the development of child internalizing behavior via children’s emotion regulation (regulation) and lability-negativity (lability). Our paper examined the longitudinal associations between parental orientation to children’s emotion and children’s internalizing behavior, and whether child regulation and lability mediated the relations. Using a stratified convenience sampling strategy, 682 parents of 341 preschool children were recruited from three kindergartens in Guangzhou, China. Parents completed questionnaires that recorded demographic information, orientation to emotion, and their children’s internalizing behavior at time 1 (T1, October 2019), children’s regulation and lability at time 2 (T2, February 2020), and children’s internalizing behavior at time 3 (T3, June 2020). Results supported a longitudinal association between parental orientation to emotion at T1 and child internalizing behavior at T3 mediated by T2 child regulation and lability. For both parents, orientation to emotion was positively associated with child regulation, and child regulation was negatively associated with child internalizing behaviors. For mothers only, orientation to emotion was negatively associated with child lability, and child lability was positively associated with child internalizing behaviors. Findings of our study highlight the importance of parents’ orientation to children’s emotion in child emotional and behavioral outcomes. Therapeutic interventions for parents should aim to improve parents’ awareness and understanding of children’s emotions.

Highlights

  • Children’s emotion regulation mediated the relations between parents’ orientation to emotion and children’s internalizing behavior.

  • Maternal emotion orientation was related to children’s internalizing behavior through child emotional regulation and lability.

  • Paternal emotion orientation was related to children’s internalizing behavior through child emotional regulation.

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Correspondence to Sisi Tao.

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The authors declare no competing interests.

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All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional (The Education University of Hong Kong) and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.

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Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study.

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Tao, S., Lau, E.Y.H. & Hong, H. Parents’ Orientation to Emotion, Children’s Emotion Regulation and Internalizing Behavior: A Longitudinal Mediation Model. J Child Fam Stud 32, 812–823 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-022-02319-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-022-02319-9

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