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Family and parenting factors are associated with emotion regulation neural function in early adolescent girls with elevated internalizing symptoms

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-13, 04:33 authored by SC Lin, E Pozzi, CE Kehoe, S Havighurst, OS Schwartz, MBH Yap, J Zhao, EH Telzer, S Whittle
Abstract A prominent tripartite model proposes that parent role modeling of emotion regulation, emotion socialization behaviors, and the emotional climate of the family are important for young people’s emotional development. However, limited research has examined the neural mechanisms at play. Here, we examined the associations between family and parenting factors, the neural correlates of emotional reactivity and regulation, and internalizing symptoms in early adolescent girls. Sixty-four female adolescents aged 10–12 years with elevated internalizing symptoms completed emotional reactivity, implicit (affect labeling) and explicit (cognitive reappraisal) emotion regulation tasks during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Positive family emotional climate was associated with greater activation in the anterior cingulate and middle temporal cortices during emotional reactivity. Maternal emotion regulation difficulties were associated with increased frontal pole and supramarginal gyrus activation during affect labeling, whereas supportive maternal emotion socialization and positive family emotional climate were associated with activation in prefrontal regions, including inferior frontal and superior frontal gyri, respectively, during cognitive reappraisal. No mediating effects of brain function were observed in the associations between family/parenting factors and adolescent symptoms. These findings highlight the role of family and parenting behaviors in adolescent emotion regulation neurobiology, and contribute to prominent models of adolescent emotional development.

History

Journal

European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

Volume

33

Pagination

4381-4391

Location

Berlin, Germany

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1018-8827

eISSN

1435-165X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

12

Publisher

Springer