학술논문

Dyadic Affective Flexibility: Measurement Considerations and the Impact of Youth Internalizing Symptoms on Flexibility.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Psychopathology & Behavioral Assessment. Mar2021, Vol. 43 Issue 1, p131-141. 11p. 1 Diagram, 1 Chart.
Subject
*STATISTICS
*AFFECT (Psychology)
*ACQUISITION of data
*AFFECTIVE disorders
*TEENAGERS' conduct of life
*MENTAL depression
*PARENT-child relationships
*ANXIETY
*EMOTIONS
*DATA analysis
*PARENTS
Language
ISSN
0882-2689
Abstract
The study examined measurement models of parent-adolescent dyadic affective flexibility and identified ways that this relational flexibility meaningfully changed in the context of adolescent anxious and depressive symptoms, both concurrently and over time. Ninety-one mother-adolescent dyads completed two five-minute tasks. Observational data were coded in real-time and examined second-by-second. Flexibility metrics were calculated (i.e., range, transitions, average mean duration, dispersion). Results supported a two-factor model of flexibility and suggested that all four metrics contribute to the construct. Adolescent internalizing symptoms positively related to flexibility, both concurrently and across a 6-month time period. Thus, dyadic affective flexibility appears best measured by utilizing all four metrics, and individual characteristics (i.e., anxious/depressive symptoms) influence dynamic family processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]