The effects of parental behavior on infants' neural processing of emotion expressions.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] C. Nelson,et al. Brain activity differentiates face and object processing in 6-month-old infants. , 1999, Developmental psychology.
[2] T. Field,et al. Facial expressions and EEG in infants of intrusive and withdrawn mothers with depressive symptoms , 2002, Depression and anxiety.
[3] S. Pollak,et al. Early experience is associated with the development of categorical representations for facial expressions of emotion , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[4] S. Pollak,et al. Physical abuse amplifies attention to threat and increases anxiety in children. , 2007, Emotion.
[5] Arnaud Delorme,et al. EEGLAB: an open source toolbox for analysis of single-trial EEG dynamics including independent component analysis , 2004, Journal of Neuroscience Methods.
[6] J. Campos,et al. Maternal emotional signaling: Its effect on the visual cliff behavior of 1-year-olds. , 1985 .
[7] J. Haviland,et al. Learning display rules: the socialization of emotion expression in infancy. , 1982, Child development.
[8] C. Nelson,et al. Featural and Configural Face Processing in Adults and Infants: A Behavioral and Electrophysiological Investigation , 2006, Perception.
[9] J. Hietanen,et al. Emergence of enhanced attention to fearful faces between 5 and 7 months of age. , 2009, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.
[10] C. Nelson,et al. Neurocognitive sequelae of infants of diabetic mothers. , 2000, Behavioral neuroscience.
[11] Y. Ziv,et al. Emotional availability in the mother–infant dyad as related to the quality of infant–mother attachment relationship , 2000, Attachment & human development.
[12] N. Fox,et al. Asymmetrical brain activity discriminates between positive and negative affective stimuli in human infants. , 1982, Science.
[13] O. Pascalis,et al. The Origins of Face Processing in Humans: Phylogeny and Ontogeny , 2009, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
[14] N. Fox,et al. Dynamic cerebral processes underlying emotion regulation. , 1994, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.
[15] M. Rutter,et al. Amygdala, hippocampal and corpus callosum size following severe early institutional deprivation: the English and Romanian Adoptees study pilot. , 2009, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.
[16] Essi Viding,et al. The link between child abuse and psychopathology: A review of neurobiological and genetic research , 2012, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.
[17] M. Eimer,et al. Event-related brain potential correlates of emotional face processing , 2007, Neuropsychologia.
[18] Jay Belsky,et al. Annual Research Review: Parenting and children's brain development: the end of the beginning. , 2011, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.
[19] B. Quinn,et al. Prolonged institutional rearing is associated with atypically large amygdala volume and difficulties in emotion regulation. , 2010, Developmental science.
[20] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Cortical specialisation for face processing: face-sensitive event-related potential components in 3- and 12-month-old infants , 2003, NeuroImage.
[21] Alan C. Evans,et al. Larger amygdala but no change in hippocampal volume in 10-year-old children exposed to maternal depressive symptomatology since birth , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[22] N. Fox,et al. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE Research Article Ordinary Variations in Maternal Caregiving Influence Human Infants ’ Stress Reactivity , 2022 .
[23] R. Davidson. Cerebral asymmetry, emotion, and affective style. , 1995 .
[24] F. McGlone,et al. The role of spatial attention in the processing of facial expression: An ERP study of rapid brain responses to six basic emotions , 2003, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.
[25] T. Johnstone,et al. Making an effort to feel positive: insecure attachment in infancy predicts the neural underpinnings of emotion regulation in adulthood , 2014, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.
[26] Mark H Johnson,et al. Development of face-sensitive event-related potentials during infancy: a review. , 2003, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.
[27] O. Pascalis,et al. Recognition memory in 3- to 4-day-old human neonates. , 1994, Neuroreport.
[28] T. Field,et al. Production and perception of facial expressions in infancy and early childhood. , 1982, Advances in child development and behavior.
[29] M. Eimer,et al. The role of spatial frequency information for ERP components sensitive to faces and emotional facial expression. , 2005, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.
[30] Measurement of Temperament in Infancy , 1981 .
[31] R. Adolphs,et al. Social and monetary reward learning engage overlapping neural substrates. , 2012, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.
[32] G. Dawson,et al. Frontal lobe activity and affective behavior of infants of mothers with depressive symptoms. , 1992, Child development.
[33] R. B. Reilly,et al. FASTER: Fully Automated Statistical Thresholding for EEG artifact Rejection , 2010, Journal of Neuroscience Methods.
[34] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Maternal personality and infants' neural and visual responsivity to facial expressions of emotion. , 2004, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.
[35] Jessica L Borelli,et al. Attachment dismissal predicts frontal slow-wave ERPs during rejection by unfamiliar peers. , 2012, Emotion.
[36] Z. Biringen,et al. Appendix A: the Emotional Availability Scales (2nd ed.; an abridged Infancy/Early Childhood Version) , 2000, Attachment & human development.
[37] Jay Belsky,et al. The relations between parents' Big Five personality factors and parenting: a meta-analytic review. , 2009, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[38] T. Striano,et al. Developmental changes in infants’ processing of happy and angry facial expressions: A neurobehavioral study , 2007, Brain and Cognition.
[39] C. Nelson,et al. Discrimination and categorization of facial expressions of emotion during infancy , 1998 .
[40] B. Roder,et al. Infants' Preferences for Familiarity and Novelty During the Course of Visual Processing. , 2000, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.
[41] M. Dolan,et al. Face affect recognition deficits in personality-disordered offenders: association with psychopathy , 2006, Psychological Medicine.
[42] K. Lyons-Ruth,et al. Infancy predictors of emotional availability in middle childhood: the roles of attachment security and maternal depressive symptomatology , 2000, Attachment & human development.
[43] Charles A Nelson,et al. An ERP study of emotional face processing in the adult and infant brain. , 2007, Child development.
[44] T. Walden,et al. The development of social referencing. , 1988, Child development.
[45] T. Striano,et al. Neural processing of eye gaze and threat-related emotional facial expressions in infancy. , 2008, Child development.
[46] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Newborns' preferential tracking of face-like stimuli and its subsequent decline , 1991, Cognition.
[47] C. Nelson,et al. Neural correlates of infants' visual responsiveness to facial expressions of emotion. , 1996, Developmental psychobiology.
[48] C. Nelson,et al. Recognition of the mother's face by six-month-old infants: a neurobehavioral study. , 1997, Child development.
[49] Gerd Lehmkuhl,et al. Do hyperactivity, impulsivity and inattention have an impact on the ability of facial affect recognition in children with autism and ADHD? , 2008, European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.
[50] R. Blair,et al. A Selective Impairment in the Processing of Sad and Fearful Expressions in Children with Psychopathic Tendencies , 2001, Journal of abnormal child psychology.
[51] L. Scott,et al. Experience-dependent neural specialization during infancy , 2010, Neuropsychologia.
[52] Nazan Aksan,et al. Mother‐Child Mutually Positive Affect, the Quality of Child Compliance to Requests and Prohibitions, and Maternal Control as Correlates of Early Internalization , 1995 .
[53] Olivier Pascalis,et al. Specialization of Neural Mechanisms Underlying Face Recognition in Human Infants , 2002, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[54] Z. Biringen. Emotional availability: conceptualization and research findings. , 2000, The American journal of orthopsychiatry.
[55] T. Field,et al. Right frontal EEG asymmetry and behavioral inhibition in infants of depressed mothers. , 2009, Infant behavior & development.
[56] D. Cicchetti,et al. P3b reflects maltreated children's reactions to facial displays of emotion. , 2001, Psychophysiology.
[57] Chronicity of maternal depressive symptoms, maternal sensitivity, and child functioning at 36 months. NICHD Early Child Care Research Network. , 1999, Developmental psychology.
[58] K. Puura,et al. Regulatory variant of the TPH2 gene and early life stress are associated with heightened attention to social signals of fear in infants. , 2014, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.
[59] J. Belsky,et al. The Multiple Determinants of Parenting , 2015 .
[60] R. Dahl,et al. Neural systems of positive affect: Relevance to understanding child and adolescent depression? , 2005, Development and Psychopathology.