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Maternal Appraisal Styles, Family Risk Status and Anger Biases of Children

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Abstract

The present study investigated the relationship between maternal appraisal styles, family risk status, and anger biases in children. Participants included 90 mothers and their children between 3–6 years of age. Eighty families were followed up 1 year later. Maternal appraisal styles were assessed via a naturalistic story-reading method, and Time 1 and Time 2 emotion biases included teacher ratings of anger and aggression, peer ratings of anger, as well as classroom and playground observations of anger. While discussing ambiguous stories with their children, mothers with higher scores on the family risk index utilized more hostile appraisals and fewer prosocial appraisals in their explanations. A higher proportion of hostile-to-prosocial appraisals was also related to higher-risk family status. Prosocial appraisals by mothers were inversely correlated with children’s anger biases at school. When the appraisal balance in mothers’ talk favored hostile appraisals, children tended to show higher levels of anger biases evidenced at school. Finally, a hostile balance of maternal appraisals was found to predict change in children’s anger biases in the school with different effects in high- and low-risk families.

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Correspondence to Carol A. Root.

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Root, C.A., Jenkins, J.M. Maternal Appraisal Styles, Family Risk Status and Anger Biases of Children. J Abnorm Child Psychol 33, 193–204 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-005-1827-x

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-005-1827-x

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