» Articles » PMID: 34761364

Effects of Parenting Environment on Child and Adolescent Social-Emotional Brain Function

Overview
Publisher Springer
Specialty Psychology
Date 2021 Nov 11
PMID 34761364
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The caregiving environment that children and adolescents experience is critically important for their social-emotional development. Parenting may affect child social-emotional outcomes through its effects in shaping the child's developing brain. Research has begun to investigate effects of parenting on child and adolescent brain function in humans using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Here we review these initial studies. These studies find associations between parenting behavior and child and adolescent functional activation in neural networks involved in emotional arousal, emotion regulation (ER), reward processing, cognitive control, and social-emotional information processing. Findings from these studies suggest that higher negative parenting and lower positive parenting are generally associated with heightened activation in emotional arousal networks in response to negative emotional stimuli in youth. Further, findings indicate that lower positive parenting is associated with higher response in reward processing networks to monetary reward in youth. Finally, findings show that lower positive parenting predicts lower activation in cognitive control networks during cognitive control tasks and less adaptive neural responses to parent-specific stimuli. Several studies found these associations to be moderated by child sex or psychopathology risk status and we discuss these moderating factors and discuss implications of findings for children's social-emotional development.

Citing Articles

Stress and substance use disorders: risk, relapse, and treatment outcomes.

Sinha R J Clin Invest. 2024; 134(16).

PMID: 39145454 PMC: 11324296. DOI: 10.1172/JCI172883.


The impact of parental overprotection on the emotions and behaviors of pediatric hematologic cancer patients: a multicenter cross-sectional study.

Yu Y, Zheng X, Xu W, Huang Y, Wang X, Hong W Front Psychol. 2024; 14:1290608.

PMID: 38298359 PMC: 10828849. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1290608.

References
1.
BAUMRIND D . Child care practices anteceding three patterns of preschool behavior. Genet Psychol Monogr. 1967; 75(1):43-88. View

2.
Phillips M, Ladouceur C, Drevets W . A neural model of voluntary and automatic emotion regulation: implications for understanding the pathophysiology and neurodevelopment of bipolar disorder. Mol Psychiatry. 2008; 13(9):829, 833-57. PMC: 2745893. DOI: 10.1038/mp.2008.65. View

3.
Pozzi E, Simmons J, Bousman C, Vijayakumar N, Bray K, Dandash O . The Influence of Maternal Parenting Style on the Neural Correlates of Emotion Processing in Children. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2019; 59(2):274-282. DOI: 10.1016/j.jaac.2019.01.018. View

4.
Tan P, Oppenheimer C, Ladouceur C, Butterfield R, Silk J . A review of associations between parental emotion socialization behaviors and the neural substrates of emotional reactivity and regulation in youth. Dev Psychol. 2020; 56(3):516-527. PMC: 7155917. DOI: 10.1037/dev0000893. View

5.
Kopala-Sibley D, Cyr M, Finsaas M, ORawe J, Huang A, Tottenham N . Early Childhood Parenting Predicts Late Childhood Brain Functional Connectivity During Emotion Perception and Reward Processing. Child Dev. 2018; 91(1):110-128. PMC: 6374219. DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13126. View