» Articles » PMID: 37397856

Parents Regulate Arousal While Sharing Experiences with Their Child: a Study of Pupil Diameter Change Responses

Overview
Specialty Neurology
Date 2023 Jul 3
PMID 37397856
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Introduction: Parents provide their children with their first exposures to reciprocal shared experiences, and parental modeling of socio-emotional behaviors and regulatory responses largely influences their child's behavioral and neurological development. Some parental reactions are conscious, while others are non-volitional. This project aimed to explore parent-child pupil dilation change responses during shared interactions, specifically, whether parents' neuro-regulatory responses when sharing experiences with their child are different than responses of children interacting with their parents or children and adult peers sharing with each other.

Methods: To test this, four distinct interacting groups were recruited: (1) Parents sharing with their child; (2) Children sharing with their parent; (3) Children sharing with peers; and (4) Adults sharing with peers. All dyads engaged in a computerized shared imagery task, which facilitates communication and mental imagery during a shared experience. During the task, pupil diameter change was recorded as a measure of regulatory response.

Results: Findings highlight that parents sharing with their child have lower pupil diameter change than children sharing with their parents ( < 0.01), children sharing with peers ( < 0.01), and adults sharing with peers ( < 0.05), While no differences were seen between children sharing with parents, children sharing with peers or adults sharing with peers.

Discussion: Findings deepen the understanding of the neuroscience of parenting, by suggesting that parents, even of older children and adolescents, tend to regulate their arousal when interacting with their child, a response that proves to be unique compared to other dyad types for sharing experiences. Considering this dynamic, findings may direct future parent-led intervention methods to improve the child's socio-emotional development.

References
1.
Bradley M, Miccoli L, Escrig M, Lang P . The pupil as a measure of emotional arousal and autonomic activation. Psychophysiology. 2008; 45(4):602-7. PMC: 3612940. DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2008.00654.x. View

2.
Waters S, West T, Mendes W . Stress contagion: physiological covariation between mothers and infants. Psychol Sci. 2014; 25(4):934-42. PMC: 4073671. DOI: 10.1177/0956797613518352. View

3.
I Becht A, Wierenga L, Mills K, Meuwese R, van Duijvenvoorde A, Blakemore S . Beyond the average brain: individual differences in social brain development are associated with friendship quality. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2020; 16(3):292-301. PMC: 7943358. DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsaa166. View

4.
Davis M, West K, Bilms J, Morelen D, Suveg C . A systematic review of parent-child synchrony: It is more than skin deep. Dev Psychobiol. 2018; 60(6):674-691. DOI: 10.1002/dev.21743. View

5.
Eisenberg N, Cumberland A, Spinrad T . Parental Socialization of Emotion. Psychol Inq. 2006; 9(4):241-273. PMC: 1513625. DOI: 10.1207/s15327965pli0904_1. View