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Emotion: Empirical Contribution: Maternal Borderline Personality Pathology and Infant Emotion Regulation: Examining the Influence of Maternal Emotion-Related Difficulties and Infant Attachment
45
Citations
43
References
2013
Year
Maternal Borderline PersonalityEducationMaternal Bp PathologySocial SciencesPsychologyEmotional ResponseDevelopmental PsychologyPersonality DisorderEmotion RegulationSocial-emotional DevelopmentEmpirical ContributionInfant AttachmentMaternal Emotion-related DifficultiesChild PsychologyPsychiatryEmotional PsychologyMaternal HealthAttachment TheoryChild DevelopmentPediatricsYoung ChildrenEmotional DevelopmentEmotionPsychopathology
Evidence suggests that maternal borderline personality (BP) pathology increases offspring risk. This study examined the relations between maternal BP pathology and related emotional dysfunction (including emotion regulation [ER] difficulties and emotional intensity/reactivity) and infant ER difficulties. Specifically, we examined both self-focused and caregiver-focused ER behaviors and the modulation of emotional expressions (one indicator of ER in young children) in response to fear- and anger-eliciting stimuli among 101 infants (12 to 23 months old) of mothers with and without clinically relevant BP pathology. The authors also examined the moderating role of mother-infant attachment. Findings of a series of multiple regression mediation analyses revealed an indirect effect of maternal BP pathology on infant ER difficulties through maternal emotional dysfunction, with maternal ER difficulties facilitating an indirect effect of maternal BP pathology on expressivity-related indicators of infant ER difficulties and maternal emotional intensity/reactivity linking maternal BP pathology to lower self-focused ER for infants in insecure-resistant attachment relationships.
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