目睹母亲长期承受巨大压力会影响儿童的执行功能。

Eileen Lashani, Isabella G. Larsen, Philipp Kanske, Jenny Rosendahl, Jost U. Blasberg, Veronika Engert
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引用次数: 0

摘要

压力会对身心健康造成不利影响,尤其是在童年时期。在这一关键时期,父母之间的纽带可以增强孩子的抗压能力,也可以放大压力。本研究探讨了母亲的日常压力是否会成为儿童压力的来源,从而影响儿童的执行功能。76 个健康的母子二人组参与了这项研究,其中母亲被分配到了有压力或无压力的环境中。儿童观察他们的母亲,随后接受认知灵活性和工作记忆测试。对母亲和儿童的主观压力、心率和皮质醇以及日常压力感知进行了反复测量。线性混合模型显示,儿童的急性压力反应与认知灵活性受损有关。与儿童自身的压力相比,母亲的压力(包括急性压力和过去一个月的压力)更能预测儿童的认知表现。四次方关系表明,母亲压力过低和过高时,错误率最高。我们没有发现任何证据表明儿童的工作记忆会受到其自身或母亲压力的影响。虽然没有观察到母亲和儿童之间预期的急性或长期压力的共变关系,但母亲过去一个月的压力和急性压力条件之间的交互作用为儿童的适应机制提供了启示。这些发现强调了母亲的压力对儿童执行功能的重要影响,说明了父母的经历如何影响儿童的日常结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Witnessing their mother’s acute and prolonged stress affects executive functioning in children

Witnessing their mother’s acute and prolonged stress affects executive functioning in children
Stress can detrimentally affect physical and mental health, especially during childhood. During this critical period, parental bonds can foster resilience or amplify stress. This study explored whether mothers’ everyday stress can act as a source of childhood stress, affecting children’s executive functioning. 76 healthy mother-child dyads participated, with mothers assigned to a stress-inducing or stress-free condition. Children observed their mothers and were subsequently tested for cognitive flexibility and working memory. Subjective stress, heart rate, and cortisol were measured repeatedly in mothers and children, alongside everyday stress perceptions. Linear mixed models showed that children’s acute stress response was associated with impaired cognitive flexibility. Maternal stress, both acute and past-month, was a better predictor of children’s cognitive performance than children’s own stress. Quadratic relationships indicated the highest error rates at very low and high maternal stress. We found no evidence that children’s working memory was impaired by their own or their mothers’ stress. Although expected covariations of acute or prolonged stress between mothers and children were not observed, an interaction between maternal past-month stress and acute stress condition provided insights into adaptive mechanisms in children. These findings underscore the significant impact of maternal stress on children’s executive functioning, illustrating how parental experiences shape children’s everyday outcomes. Mothers’ acute and prolonged stress predicted their children’s cognitive performance on a working memory and cognitive flexibility task. Quadratic effects indicated worse performance at high and low levels of maternal stress.
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