4.5 Article

Maternal Reminiscing During Middle Childhood: Associations With Maternal Personality and Child Temperament From the Growing Up in New Zealand Cohort Study

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/dev0001596

Keywords

maternal reminiscing; temperament; personality; culture; language

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This study examined various factors that predict maternal reminiscing style, including child temperament, maternal personality, education, ethnicity, and age. The findings revealed that infant temperament and maternal extraversion uniquely predicted maternal reminiscing style.
The way that mothers talk about the past (reminisce) with young children is linked to key memory, language, and socioemotional outcomes. The present research explored the role of a range of child, maternal, socioeconomic, and cultural factors that predict maternal reminiscing style, with a particular focus on maternal personality and child temperament. A total of 1,404 mother-child dyads from the prebirth longitudinal cohort study Growing Up in New Zealand (https://www.growingup.co.nz) participated in a reminiscing task about a negative event when children were 8 years old. This broader cohort is broadly representative of the New Zealand population in terms of maternal ethnicity and socioeconomic status. Conversations were scored using a revised version of the Elaborative Reminiscing Scale. Child temperament during infancy, but not childhood, uniquely predicted maternal reminiscing style. Maternal extraversion also predicted a more elaborative reminiscing style. Other maternal factors, including education, ethnicity, and age, were also identified as unique predictors of maternal reminiscing style. These findings fit well with an ecological systems view of maternal reminiscing as a function of child, maternal, and cultural factors. Public Significance Statement These findings suggest that mothers differ in their style of reminiscing with their children based on a number of individual and sociocultural factors, including the mother's personality and the child's temperament. Further research on the directionality of the relationship between reminiscing and child temperament may inform the development of reminiscing coaching programs for parents.

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