4.5 Article

Secure Attachment in Infancy Predicts Context-Dependent Emotion Expression in Middle Childhood

Journal

EMOTION
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 258-269

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/emo0000985

Keywords

attachment; emotion regulation; parent-child relationship; development

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [R01MH074374]
  2. National Institute on Drug Abuse [F31DA050426]

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The study found that children who were securely attached in infancy exhibited less task-incongruent affect and better negative affect regulation during parent-child interactions at age 9 compared to insecurely attached children. Secure children also showed more appropriate emotion expression, highlighting attachment as a promising intervention target for children at risk for emotion dysregulation.
Attachment security has been linked to healthy socioemotional development, but less is known about how secure attachment in infancy relates to emotional functioning in middle childhood, particularly across multiple contexts. The present study examined associations between secure attachment in infancy and children's context-dependent emotion expression during a parent-child interaction at age 9 (N = 78) among families with Child Protective Services involvement (i.e., children at risk for emotion dysregulation). The results indicated that children classified as securely attached in infancy exhibited less task-incongruent affect (i.e., less positive affect during a distressing discussion, less negative affect during a positive discussion) and a greater decrease in negative affect from a distressing discussion to a positive discussion than children classified as insecurely attached. In addition, secure children were rated as more appropriate in their emotion expression than insecure children. The present study highlights attachment as a promising intervention target for children at risk for emotion dysregulation.

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