Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency

Using a large sample from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care, the current study examined the processes through which children's agentic processes promoted their resilience in the face of mothers' depressive symptoms at first grade. Children's resilience in the presence of mothers...

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Main Author: Yan, Ni, active 21st century
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/25929
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-259292015-09-20T17:25:04ZChildren's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agencyYan, Ni, active 21st centuryMothers' depressive symptomsResilienceEffortful controlAutonomyMastery motivationUsing a large sample from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care, the current study examined the processes through which children's agentic processes promoted their resilience in the face of mothers' depressive symptoms at first grade. Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms was demonstrated to be homogeneous across domains of academic performance, social competence, internalizing behavior, and externalizing behavior. Children's effortful control, self-assertion, and mastery motivation predicted their resilience in these domains to a varying degree. The agentic processes mediated the relation of different patterns of individual (i.e., child intelligence, temperament), relational (i.e., attachment security), and environmental (i.e., maternal sensitivity, childcare quality) factors to children's resilience across domains. Interrelations among child individual, relational, and environmental characteristics were also observed. Moreover, findings from two analytic approaches converged in terms of underscoring the importance of the agentic system in promoting child resilience in the face of mothers' depressive symptoms. Children's agentic processes promoted their resilience via additive main effects rather than interactive effects.text2014-09-17T18:58:18Z2014-052014-09-16May 20142014-09-17T18:58:18ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/25929en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Mothers' depressive symptoms
Resilience
Effortful control
Autonomy
Mastery motivation
spellingShingle Mothers' depressive symptoms
Resilience
Effortful control
Autonomy
Mastery motivation
Yan, Ni, active 21st century
Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency
description Using a large sample from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care, the current study examined the processes through which children's agentic processes promoted their resilience in the face of mothers' depressive symptoms at first grade. Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms was demonstrated to be homogeneous across domains of academic performance, social competence, internalizing behavior, and externalizing behavior. Children's effortful control, self-assertion, and mastery motivation predicted their resilience in these domains to a varying degree. The agentic processes mediated the relation of different patterns of individual (i.e., child intelligence, temperament), relational (i.e., attachment security), and environmental (i.e., maternal sensitivity, childcare quality) factors to children's resilience across domains. Interrelations among child individual, relational, and environmental characteristics were also observed. Moreover, findings from two analytic approaches converged in terms of underscoring the importance of the agentic system in promoting child resilience in the face of mothers' depressive symptoms. Children's agentic processes promoted their resilience via additive main effects rather than interactive effects. === text
author Yan, Ni, active 21st century
author_facet Yan, Ni, active 21st century
author_sort Yan, Ni, active 21st century
title Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency
title_short Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency
title_full Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency
title_fullStr Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency
title_full_unstemmed Children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency
title_sort children's resilience in the presence of mothers' depressive symptoms : examining proximal regulatory processes related to active agency
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/25929
work_keys_str_mv AT yanniactive21stcentury childrensresilienceinthepresenceofmothersdepressivesymptomsexaminingproximalregulatoryprocessesrelatedtoactiveagency
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