4.5 Article

Exclusion Expected? Cardiac Slowing Upon Peer Exclusion Links Preschool Parent Representations to School-Age Peer Relationships

Journal

CHILD DEVELOPMENT
Volume 92, Issue 4, Pages 1274-1290

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13494

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [KL 2315/1-1, KL2315/1-2, KL 2338/1-2]
  2. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01KR1201A, 01KR1802A]

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The study suggests that children's positive attachment representations from parents are associated with cardiac slowing during peer exclusion events, possibly indicating a psychophysiological mechanism for the generalization of attachment-related representations to peer relationships.
Attachment theory proposes that children's representations of interactions with caregivers guide information-processing about others, bridging interpersonal domains. In a longitudinal study (N = 165), preschoolers (M-age = 5.19 years) completed the MacArthur Story Stem Battery to assess parent representations. At school-age (M-age = 8.42 years), children played a virtual ballgame with peers who eventually excluded them to track event-related cardiac slowing, a physiological correlate of rejection, especially when unexpected. At both ages, parents and teachers reported on peer and emotional problems. During exclusion versus inclusion-related events, cardiac slowing was associated with greater positive parent representations and fewer emerging peer problems. Cardiac slowing served as a mediator between positive parent representations and peer problems, supporting a potential psychophysiological mechanism underlying the generalization of attachment-related representations to peer relationships.

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