Maternal experiences of childhood maltreatment moderate patterns of mother-infant cortisol regulation under stress.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] L. Atkinson,et al. Mother–infant cortisol attunement: Associations with mother–infant attachment disorganization , 2019, Development and Psychopathology.
[2] Lenneke R. A. Alink,et al. The effect of maltreatment experiences on maltreating and dysfunctional parenting: A search for mechanisms , 2019, Development and Psychopathology.
[3] J. Pearson,et al. Maternal history of childhood maltreatment and later parenting behavior: A meta-analysis , 2019, Development and Psychopathology.
[4] Leah C. Hibel,et al. Child Maltreatment and Mother–Child Transmission of Stress Physiology , 2019, Child maltreatment.
[5] C. Pariante,et al. When one childhood meets another – maternal childhood trauma and offspring child psychopathology: A systematic review , 2018, Clinical child psychology and psychiatry.
[6] Martin Styner,et al. Intergenerational Effect of Maternal Exposure to Childhood Maltreatment on Newborn Brain Anatomy , 2018, Biological Psychiatry.
[7] Tessa V. West,et al. Measuring Physiological Influence in Dyads: A Guide to Designing, Implementing, and Analyzing Dyadic Physiological Studies , 2017, Psychological methods.
[8] Cassandra L. Hendrix,et al. Physiological attunement in mother–infant dyads at clinical high risk: The influence of maternal depression and positive parenting , 2017, Development and Psychopathology.
[9] M. Kaess,et al. The effect of a maternal history of childhood abuse on adrenocortical attunement in mothers and their toddlers , 2017, Developmental psychobiology.
[10] D. Fair,et al. Intergenerational Transmission of Maternal Childhood Maltreatment Exposure: Implications for Fetal Brain Development. , 2017, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
[11] D. Kashy,et al. Do different data analytic approaches generate discrepant findings when measuring mother–infant HPA axis attunement? , 2017, Developmental psychobiology.
[12] J. Khoury,et al. Stress Physiology in Infancy and Early Childhood: Cortisol Flexibility, Attunement and Coordination , 2016, Journal of neuroendocrinology.
[13] M. Kaess,et al. Sex-specific differences in adrenocortical attunement in mothers with a history of childhood abuse and their 5-month-old boys and girls , 2016, Journal of Neural Transmission.
[14] R. Mccall,et al. The Genetic and Environmental Origins of Learning Abilities and Disabilities in the Early School , 2007, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.
[15] Cassandra L. Hendrix,et al. Maternal early-life trauma and affective parenting style: the mediating role of HPA-axis function , 2016, Archives of Women's Mental Health.
[16] Marissa Stroo,et al. Correlation between maternal and infant cortisol varies by breastfeeding status. , 2015, Infant behavior & development.
[17] Adela C. Timmons,et al. Physiological linkage in couples and its implications for individual and interpersonal functioning: A literature review. , 2015, Journal of family psychology : JFP : journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association.
[18] Martin H. Teicher,et al. The ‘Maltreatment and Abuse Chronology of Exposure’ (MACE) Scale for the Retrospective Assessment of Abuse and Neglect During Development , 2015, PloS one.
[19] C. Blair,et al. Maternal-child adrenocortical attunement in early childhood: continuity and change. , 2015, Developmental psychobiology.
[20] H. Kim,et al. Maternal abuse history and self-regulation difficulties in preadolescence. , 2014, Child abuse & neglect.
[21] M. Beeghly,et al. Maternal parenting predicts infant biobehavioral regulation among women with a history of childhood maltreatment , 2014, Development and Psychopathology.
[22] R. Borgatti,et al. Four-Month-Old Infants’ Long-Term Memory for a Stressful Social Event , 2013, PloS one.
[23] D. Kashy,et al. Maternal sensitivity and infant and mother adrenocortical function across challenges , 2013, Psychoneuroendocrinology.
[24] B. Holmes,et al. Maternal Disrupted Communication During Face-to-Face Interaction at 4 months: Relation to Maternal and Infant Cortisol Among at-Risk Families. , 2013, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.
[25] M. Gunnar,et al. Future Directions in the Study of Social Relationships as Regulators of the HPA Axis Across Development , 2013, Journal of clinical child and adolescent psychology : the official journal for the Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, American Psychological Association, Division 53.
[26] Sarah J. Erickson,et al. Differential associations between infant affective and cortisol responses during the still face paradigm among infants born very low birth weight versus full-term. , 2013, Infant behavior & development.
[27] R. Feldman. Bio-behavioral Synchrony: A Model for Integrating Biological and Microsocial Behavioral Processes in the Study of Parenting , 2012 .
[28] Laura L. Nathans,et al. Asynchrony of mother-infant hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity following extinction of infant crying responses induced during the transition to sleep. , 2012, Early human development.
[29] Rebecca L. Stelter,et al. Parent emotional expressiveness and children's self-regulation: associations with abused children's school functioning. , 2012, Child abuse & neglect.
[30] Heidemarie K. Laurent,et al. Taking stress response out of the box: stability, discontinuity, and temperament effects on HPA and SNS across social stressors in mother-infant dyads. , 2012, Developmental psychology.
[31] Heidemarie K. Laurent,et al. Risky shifts: How the timing and course of mothers' depressive symptoms across the perinatal period shape their own and infant's stress response profiles , 2011, Development and Psychopathology.
[32] P. Brennan,et al. The impact of maternal childhood abuse on maternal and infant HPA axis function in the postpartum period , 2010, Psychoneuroendocrinology.
[33] Ruth Feldman,et al. Touch attenuates infants' physiological reactivity to stress. , 2010, Developmental science.
[34] C. McMahon,et al. Maternal prenatal anxiety, postnatal caregiving and infants' cortisol responses to the still-face procedure. , 2009, Developmental psychobiology.
[35] M. Cox,et al. Intimate partner violence moderates the association between mother-infant adrenocortical activity across an emotional challenge. , 2009, Journal of family psychology : JFP : journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association.
[36] Judi Mesman,et al. The many faces of the Still-Face Paradigm: A review and meta-analysis , 2009 .
[37] D. Cicchetti,et al. The past achievements and future promises of developmental psychopathology: the coming of age of a discipline. , 2009, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.
[38] J. Riksen-Walraven,et al. Adrenocortical and behavioral attunement in parents with 1-year-old infants. , 2008, Developmental psychobiology.
[39] L. Thompson,et al. Cortisol reactivity, maternal sensitivity, and learning in 3-month-old infants. , 2008, Infant behavior & development.
[40] Caroline E. Wright,et al. Poor sleep the night before an experimental stress task is associated with reduced cortisol reactivity in healthy women , 2007, Biological Psychology.
[41] M. Lewis,et al. Infant emotional and cortisol responses to goal blockage. , 2005, Child development.
[42] S. Dickerson,et al. Acute stressors and cortisol responses: a theoretical integration and synthesis of laboratory research. , 2004, Psychological bulletin.
[43] David W. Haley,et al. Infant stress and parent responsiveness: regulation of physiology and behavior during still-face and reunion. , 2003, Child development.
[44] K. Stansbury,et al. Attunement of maternal and child adrenocortical response to child challenge , 2002, Psychoneuroendocrinology.
[45] M. Gunnar,et al. Social regulation of the cortisol levels in early human development , 2002, Psychoneuroendocrinology.
[46] James D. A. Parker,et al. The handbook of emotional intelligence : theory, development, assessment, and application at home, school, and in the workplace , 2000 .
[47] A. Fleming,et al. Neurobiology of mother–infant interactions: experience and central nervous system plasticity across development and generations , 1999, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
[48] D. Williamson,et al. Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults. The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study. , 1998, American journal of preventive medicine.
[49] J. Cassidy. Emotion regulation: influences of attachment relationships. , 1994, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.
[50] C. Kopp. Regulation of distress and negative emotions: A developmental view. , 1989 .
[51] T. Brazelton,et al. The infant's response to entrapment between contradictory messages in face-to-face interaction. , 1978, Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry.