[article] 
					| Titre : | 
					Maternal psychological control and child internalizing symptoms: vulnerability and protective factors across bioregulatory and ecological domains | 
				 
					| Type de document :  | 
					texte imprimé | 
				 
					| Auteurs :  | 
					Mona EL-SHEIKH, Auteur ; Stephen ERATH, Auteur ; J. Benjamin HINNANT, Auteur ; Ryan J. KELLY, Auteur | 
				 
					| Année de publication :  | 
					2010 | 
				 
					| Article en page(s) :  | 
					p.188-198 | 
				 
					| Langues : | 
					Anglais (eng) | 
				 
					| Mots-clés :  | 
					Children's-sleep internalizing-problems depression anxiety family-income socioeconomic-status | 
				 
					| Index. décimale :  | 
					PER Périodiques | 
				 
					| Résumé :  | 
					Background: We examined ecological (family socioeconomic status (SES)) and bioregulatory (sleep duration, sleep efficiency) moderators of the link between maternal psychological control and children's vulnerability to internalizing symptoms. 
 
Method: A large socioeconomically diverse sample of third graders (N = 141) and their mothers participated. Sleep was examined via actigraphy for one week. Psychological control and internalizing symptoms (depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, pre-sleep arousal) were examined through children's reports. 
 
Results: For children with poorer sleep, lower SES, or a combination of the two, maternal psychological control was positively related to depressive symptoms; this association was not evident for children with both better sleep and higher SES. Further, maternal psychological control, sleep efficiency, and SES interacted to predict both anxiety symptoms and pre-sleep arousal. Children were protected from the negative effects of psychological control when they were from higher SES families and had higher sleep efficiency; for all other groups of children, psychological control was associated with anxiety symptoms. A similar but less robust pattern of results was found for pre-sleep arousal. 
 
Conclusions: Findings highlight the importance of children's bioregulatory processes within the socioeconomic context for an enhanced understanding of children's vulnerability to internalizing problems in the context of maternal psychological control. | 
				 
					| En ligne :  | 
					http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7610.2009.02140.x | 
				 
					| Permalink : | 
					https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=941 | 
				  in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry > 51-2  (February 2010) . - p.188-198 
 
					[article] Maternal psychological control and child internalizing symptoms: vulnerability and protective factors across bioregulatory and ecological domains [texte imprimé] /  Mona EL-SHEIKH, Auteur ;  Stephen ERATH, Auteur ;  J. Benjamin HINNANT, Auteur ;  Ryan J. KELLY, Auteur . - 2010 . - p.188-198. Langues : Anglais ( eng) in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry >  51-2  (February 2010) . - p.188-198 
					| Mots-clés :  | 
					Children's-sleep internalizing-problems depression anxiety family-income socioeconomic-status | 
				 
					| Index. décimale :  | 
					PER Périodiques | 
				 
					| Résumé :  | 
					Background: We examined ecological (family socioeconomic status (SES)) and bioregulatory (sleep duration, sleep efficiency) moderators of the link between maternal psychological control and children's vulnerability to internalizing symptoms. 
 
Method: A large socioeconomically diverse sample of third graders (N = 141) and their mothers participated. Sleep was examined via actigraphy for one week. Psychological control and internalizing symptoms (depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, pre-sleep arousal) were examined through children's reports. 
 
Results: For children with poorer sleep, lower SES, or a combination of the two, maternal psychological control was positively related to depressive symptoms; this association was not evident for children with both better sleep and higher SES. Further, maternal psychological control, sleep efficiency, and SES interacted to predict both anxiety symptoms and pre-sleep arousal. Children were protected from the negative effects of psychological control when they were from higher SES families and had higher sleep efficiency; for all other groups of children, psychological control was associated with anxiety symptoms. A similar but less robust pattern of results was found for pre-sleep arousal. 
 
Conclusions: Findings highlight the importance of children's bioregulatory processes within the socioeconomic context for an enhanced understanding of children's vulnerability to internalizing problems in the context of maternal psychological control. | 
				 
					| En ligne :  | 
					http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7610.2009.02140.x | 
				 
					| Permalink : | 
					https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=941 | 
				 
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