Maternal Perceptions and Responsiveness to Cry in Armed Conflict Zones: Links to Child Behavior Problems.

IF 2.9 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Kinneret Levavi, Tal Yatziv, Porat Yakov, Alison Pike, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Amnon Hadar, Guy Bar, Miron Froimovici, Naama Atzaba-Poria
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Abstract

Crying is a typical infant behavior that activates parental caregiving behaviors, acting as "human alarms" important for the infant's survival. When living under war-related threat, the auditory system may be sensitized given its importance for survival, potentially impacting maternal cry processing. Children living in armed-conflict zones are at increased risk for behavior problems, which may relate to both direct exposure and indirect effects through their parents' perceptions and behaviors. This hypothesis was examined in a sample of mothers and their first-born children (aged 10-45 months) living in the Gaza vicinity area in Israel, chronically exposed to missile alarms (high-exposure; n = 45), and a comparison group (low-exposure; n = 86). Group differences in child behavior problems and maternal perceptions of and responsiveness to cry were investigated. A moderated indirect-effect of maternal cry perceptions on child behavior problems via maternal responsiveness to cry was examined. In the high-exposure group, children had more externalizing problems and mothers rated cries as more aversive. Maternal cry perception was indirectly related to child behavior problems via responsiveness to cry only in the high-exposure group: higher perceptions of cry as aversive or the child as distressed were related to faster responding to crying, and faster cry responsiveness was linked with fewer behavior problems. Results suggest that in armed-conflict zones with auditory warning signals, the parental caring system may be easily activated by cries due to the strong association between alarms and threat. Furthermore, children may need their mothers to react faster when feeling distressed, possibly because of the surrounding threat.

武装冲突地区母亲对哭声的看法和反应:与儿童行为问题的联系。
啼哭是一种典型的婴儿行为,它能激活父母的照顾行为,成为对婴儿生存十分重要的 "人类警报"。当生活在与战争相关的威胁下时,听觉系统可能会因为其对生存的重要性而变得敏感,从而可能影响到母亲对哭声的处理。生活在武装冲突地区的儿童出现行为问题的风险增加,这可能与直接接触有关,也可能与父母的观念和行为的间接影响有关。研究人员对生活在以色列加沙附近地区、长期暴露于导弹警报(高暴露;n = 45)的母亲及其头胎子女(10-45 个月大)和对比组(低暴露;n = 86)进行了抽样调查。研究调查了儿童行为问题的组间差异以及母亲对哭声的感知和反应。研究还考察了母亲的哭声感知通过母亲对哭声的反应对儿童行为问题的间接影响。在高暴露组中,儿童有更多的外部化问题,而母亲则将哭声评为更具厌恶性。只有在高暴露组中,母亲的哭声感知才会通过对哭声的反应与儿童行为问题间接相关:认为哭声具有厌恶性或儿童感到痛苦的感知越高,对哭声的反应就越快,而对哭声的反应越快,行为问题就越少。研究结果表明,在有听觉警告信号的武装冲突地区,由于警报与威胁之间的紧密联系,父母的关爱系统很容易被哭声激活。此外,儿童在感到痛苦时可能需要母亲做出更快的反应,这可能与周围的威胁有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology Psychology-Developmental and Educational Psychology
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
4.00%
发文量
107
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