학술논문

Developmental Patterns of Child Emotion Dysregulation as Predicted by Serotonin Transporter Genotype and Parenting
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology. 47(sup1)
Subject
Clinical and Health Psychology
Psychology
Prevention
Clinical Research
Mental Health
Genetics
Pediatric
Behavioral and Social Science
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Adolescent
Affective Symptoms
Child
Child Behavior
Child Development
Child
Preschool
Developmental Disabilities
Female
Gene-Environment Interaction
Genotype
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Parent-Child Relations
Parenting
Predictive Value of Tests
Prospective Studies
Serotonin Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins
Cognitive Sciences
Developmental & Child Psychology
Applied and developmental psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Social and personality psychology
Language
Abstract
Individual differences in emotion regulation are central to social, academic, occupational, and psychological development, and emotion dysregulation (ED) in childhood is a risk factor for numerous developmental outcomes. The present study aimed to (a) describe the developmental trajectory of ED across early childhood (3-6 years) and (b) examine its sensitivity to youth serotonin transporter genotype, positive and negative parenting behaviors, and their interaction. Participants were 99 families in the Collaborative Family Study, a longitudinal study of children with or without developmental delays. Child ED and early parenting were coded from parent-child interactions. To examine serotonin transporter genotype as a moderator between parenting and child emotion dysregulation (ED), children with the homozygous short (SS) genotype were compared to children with the homozygous long (LL) or heterozygous (SL) genotype. We used latent growth curve modeling (LGCM) to model yearly change in ED from child age 3 to 6 years. LGCM revealed that ED decreased overall across early childhood. In addition, we observed separate Genotype × Positive and Genotype × Negative parenting behavior interactions in predictions of ED growth curves. Children with the SL/LL genotype had ED trajectories that were minimally related to positive and negative parenting behavior, whereas ED decreased more precipitously among children with the SS genotype when exposed to low negative parenting or high positive parenting. These findings provide evidence for Gene × Environment interactions (G×Es) in the development of ED in a manner that is conceptually consistent with vantage sensitivity, and they improve inferences afforded by prospective designs.