33 results on '"Philbrook, Lauren E."'
Search Results
2. Dynamic Patterns of Marital Conflict: Relations to Trajectories of Adolescent Adjustment
- Author
-
El-Sheikh, Mona, Shimizu, Mina, Erath, Stephen A., Philbrook, Lauren E., and Hinnant, J. Benjamin
- Abstract
The deleterious effects of marital conflict on youth outcomes are well-documented in both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies. To date, longitudinal studies have focused on repeated measures of youths' outcomes and the temporal dynamics of marital conflict have largely been ignored. Marital conflict changes over time as contextual and relationship characteristics change, and these patterns of change may provide unique predictive power in accounting for differences in youth outcomes. This study provides a novel exploration of an old idea by focusing on dynamic patterns of marital conflict in predicting trajectories of adolescents' adjustment. All variables were measured at ages 16, 17, and 18 with 252 adolescents (53% female) enrolled in the longitudinal Family Stress and Youth Development Study. Latent growth curve models with latent variable interactions were used to determine whether marital conflict at age 16 (intercept), change over time in marital conflict (slope), and the intercept--slope interaction predicted change over time in adolescent internalizing and externalizing symptoms and levels of internalizing and externalizing symptoms at age 18. Youth exposed to high and increasing levels of marital conflict reported high and stable levels of internalizing and externalizing symptoms across adolescence. Adolescents exposed to low and decreasing levels of marital conflict had consistently fewer symptoms. Furthermore, exposure to initially low but increasing levels of marital conflict was associated with increases in problems across adolescence, which contrasted with findings for youth with initially high marital conflict exposure that decreased over time. Findings are discussed in relation to both conceptual and methodological advances.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Stability and Change in Daytime and Nighttime Sleep in Children Attending Daycare
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Vaughn, Brian E., Lu, Ting, Krzysik, Lisa, and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Abstract
Many young children experience insufficient or poor quality sleep, which may have implications for adjustment and cognitive performance. This study tested group-level changes and rank-order stability in both daytime and nighttime sleep parameters over a six-month period, from fall to spring, among children receiving high-quality, center-based daycare. A total of 68 preschoolers (54% girls; M(subscript age) = 3.80 years, SD = 0.68) participated. Sleep was assessed via actigraphy for seven days and nights; sleep duration (actual sleep minutes) and quality parameters were derived. Analyses of group-level changes indicated that children's daytime and nighttime sleep duration did not change significantly from fall to spring. Nighttime sleep quality showed significant improvement, however, such that children had higher sleep efficiency in the spring than in the fall. Rank-order stability in both nighttime and daytime measures of sleep duration and quality was moderate, and stability in daytime sleep quality was low. Results add to a sparse literature examining stability in sleep parameters in young children using actigraphy.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Sleep and development in adolescence in the context of socioeconomic disadvantage
- Author
-
El-Sheikh, Mona, Shimizu, Mina, Philbrook, Lauren E., Erath, Stephen A., and Buckhalt, Joseph A.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Marital Conflict and Trajectories of Adolescent Adjustment: The Role of Autonomic Nervous System Coordination
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Erath, Stephen A., Hinnant, J. Benjamin, and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Abstract
The present study investigates how coordination between stress responsivity of the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) and sympathetic nervous system (SNS) moderates the prospective effects of marital conflict on internalizing and externalizing symptoms across adolescence. Although an important avenue for psychophysiological research concerns how PNS and SNS responses jointly influence adjustment in the context of stress, these processes have rarely been studied in adolescence or longitudinally. Participants were 252 youth (53% female, 66% European American, 34% African American) who participated in laboratory assessments when they were 16, 17, and 18 years old. PNS activity (measured via respiratory sinus arrhythmia [RSA]) and SNS activity (measured via skin conductance level [SCL]) were assessed during a resting baseline and in response to a laboratory-based challenge (star tracing). Parents and adolescents both reported on marital conflict and adolescents reported on their internalizing and externalizing symptoms. At higher levels of marital conflict, coactivation of PNS and SNS activity, characterized by increased RSA and increased SCL from baseline to challenge, predicted elevated internalizing symptoms and an increase in externalizing behavior across adolescence. Coinhibition, or decreased activity across both systems, also predicted an increase in internalizing symptoms over time. At lower levels of marital conflict, internalizing and externalizing symptoms were relatively low. Findings extend primarily cross-sectional work with younger children by demonstrating that coordination between the two branches of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) moderates the longitudinal effects of marital conflict on psychological and behavioral maladjustment among adolescents.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Beliefs That White People Are Poor, Above and Beyond Beliefs That Black People Are Poor, Predict White (But Not Black) Americans' Attitudes Toward Welfare Recipients and Policy.
- Author
-
Cooley, Erin, Brown-Iannuzzi, Jazmin L., Lei, Ryan F., Cipolli, William, and Philbrook, Lauren E.
- Abstract
In past work, White Americans' beliefs about Black poverty have predicted lower perceived work ethic of the poor, and, thus, less welfare support. In this article, we examine whether beliefs about White poverty predict more positive attributions about the poor among three representative samples of White Americans. Study 1 reveals that White (but not Black) Americans' White-poor beliefs predict increased perceptions that welfare recipients are hardworking, which predict more welfare support. Study 2 demonstrates that the link between White Americans' White-poor beliefs and the humanization of welfare recipients is stronger among White Americans who feel intergroup status threat (i.e., those who hold racial zero-sum beliefs). Study 3 replicates and extends Study 2 by using an experimental approach. Together, these data suggest that White Americans' White-poor beliefs function to humanize welfare recipients as a means to justify policies that could help the ingroup, preserving the racial status quo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Sleepiness as a pathway linking race and socioeconomic status with academic and cognitive outcomes in middle childhood
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Shimizu, Mina, Buckhalt, Joseph A., and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Sleep and Cognitive Functioning in Childhood: Ethnicity, Socioeconomic Status, and Sex as Moderators
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Hinnant, J. Benjamin, Elmore-Staton, Lori, Buckhalt, Joseph A., and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Abstract
We examined children's sleep at age 9 as a predictor of developmental trajectories of cognitive performance from ages 9 to 11 years. The effects of sleep on cognition are not uniform and thus we tested race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status (SES), and sex as moderators of these associations. At the first assessment, 282 children aged 9.44 years (52% boys, 65% European American [EA], 35% African American [AA]) participated. Two more waves of data collection spaced 1 year apart followed. The majority of children (63%) were living at or below the poverty line. Children's sleep was measured objectively with actigraphy and 2 well-established sleep parameters were derived: duration, indexed by sleep minutes between sleep onset and wake time, and quality, indexed by efficiency. Multiple cognitive functioning domains were examined with the Woodcock Johnson Tests of Cognitive Abilities (WJ III). Across the sample, higher sleep efficiency, but not duration, was associated with better cognitive performance. Significant moderation effects emerged. Controlling for SES, AA children scored lower on general intellectual ability and working memory (WM) at age 11 only if they experienced lower sleep efficiency at age 9. Further, boys scored lower on general abilities and processing speed (PS) at age 11 only if their sleep efficiency was lower at age 9. Findings indicate that lower sleep efficiency may contribute to lower cognitive functioning especially for AA children and boys. These vulnerabilities appear to emerge early in development and are maintained over time. Results underscore the importance of individual differences in explicating relations between sleep and children's cognitive performance.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Associations between neighborhood context, physical activity, and sleep in adolescents
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E. and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Diurnal Cortisol Change Moderates the Associations Between Bedtime Parenting Sensitivity and Young Children's Executive Functioning and Emotion Regulation.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E.
- Subjects
- *
BEDTIME , *PARENT-child relationships , *EXECUTIVE function , *PARENTAL sensitivity , *ASSOCIATE degree education , *MORNINGNESS-Eveningness Questionnaire - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Sleepiness Moderates the Associations between Personality and Financial Risk Tolerance and Spending Habits among College Students.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E. and Simmons, Eric J.
- Subjects
- *
FINANCIAL risk , *DROWSINESS , *COLLEGE students , *PERSONALITY , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *EXTRAVERSION - Abstract
Personality and sleep characteristics are related to financial attitudes and behaviors. However, to our knowledge no study has examined how personality and sleep may be conjointly associated with these financial outcomes. The present study examined sleepiness as a moderator of the associations between college students' personality traits and financial risk tolerance and spending habits. Undergraduates (N = 177, 77% women, 78% White) self-reported their personality traits and sleepiness using well-established questionnaires. Financial attitudes and behaviors were assessed via students' self-reported responses to a set of scenarios assessing risk tolerance as well as their spending habits over the prior two weeks. Multiple regression analyses were run. Across five significant two-way interactions, high levels of sleepiness exacerbated risk for greater financial risk tolerance and higher spending among those characterized by high open-mindedness and low neuroticism, whereas low sleepiness increased protection for lower risk tolerance and less spending among those high in agreeableness and conscientiousness. Sleepiness may act as both a vulnerability and protective factor in relations between personality and financial attitudes and behaviors. Improvements in sleepiness, which is modifiable via intervention, may have significant implications for individuals' financial well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Infant emotion regulation: Relations to bedtime emotional availability, attachment security, and temperament
- Author
-
Kim, Bo-Ram, Stifter, Cynthia A., Philbrook, Lauren E., and Teti, Douglas M.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Bidirectional Associations Between Bedtime Parenting and Infant Sleep: Parenting Quality, Parenting Practices, and Their Interaction
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E. and Teti, Douglas M.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Sleep disturbances moderate the association between effortful control and executive functioning in early childhood
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Becker, Lindsey E., and Linde, Jordan
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Trajectories of sleep and cardiac sympathetic activity indexed by pre‐ejection period in childhood
- Author
-
El‐Sheikh, Mona, Hinnant, J. Benjamin, and Philbrook, Lauren E.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Bedtime parenting practices and sensitivity are associated with young children's sleep.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Aguilar, Karen, Bohan, Amelia R., Daza, Kaila M., and Harris, Sarah L.
- Subjects
- *
PARENT-child relationships , *BEDTIME , *PARENTING , *CO-sleeping , *SECURITY (Psychology) , *SLEEP , *VIDEO coding - Abstract
Previous research has utilized naturalistic observations of parent-child interactions at bedtime to identify constellations of specific parenting behaviors and qualities that predict better infant nighttime sleep. Little work, however, has naturalistically examined associations between aspects of bedtime parenting and nighttime sleep among young children. The present study assessed observed parenting practices and sensitivity in the context of bedtime as predictors of 3-6-year-olds' sleep. Participants were 51 children (53% boys; 80% White, 18% biracial, 2% Black) and their families. Trained raters coded video recordings of bedtime for parenting practices (parental presence, contact, quiet activities; children's technology use) and sensitivity. Children's nighttime sleep (minutes, efficiency) was assessed across seven nights using actigraphy. Partial correlation analyses controlling for child and family demographics showed that more quiet activities, greater parenting sensitivity, and less child technology use at bedtime were associated with longer and more efficient sleep. There were also several significant interactions. Longer parental presence and contact at bedtime were associated with better sleep (minutes, efficiency) for children who experienced high but not low parenting sensitivity. Lower child technology use in combination with higher parental presence was also associated with longer and more efficient child sleep. The findings illuminate aspects of the bedtime context that may promote emotional security and reduce physiological and cognitive arousal in young children. These naturalistic observations may readily translate into intervention programming targeting improvement in young children's sleep. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Longitudinal associations between adolescents' sleep and adjustment: Respiratory sinus arrhythmia as a moderator.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Shimizu, Mina, Erath, Stephen A., Hinnant, J. Benjamin, and El‐Sheikh, Mona
- Abstract
Sleep and autonomic nervous system functioning are important bioregulatory systems. Poor sleep and low baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), a measure of parasympathetic nervous system activity, are associated with externalizing behaviors and depressive symptoms in youth. Rarely, however, have measures of these systems been examined conjointly. The present study examined baseline RSA (RSA‐B) as a moderator of longitudinal relations between adolescent sleep and adjustment. Participants were 256 adolescents (52% girls, 66% White/European American, 34% Black/African American) from small towns and surrounding rural communities in the southeastern United States. Sleep (minutes, efficiency, variability in minutes and efficiency) was assessed at age 15 via actigraphs across seven nights. RSA‐B was derived from electrocardiogram data collected at rest. Adolescents self‐reported externalizing problems and depressive symptoms at ages 15 and 17. Controlling for age 15 adjustment, findings generally demonstrated that sleep predicted age 17 adjustment particularly at higher (rather than lower) levels of RSA‐B, such that adolescents with good sleep (more minutes and lower variability) and high RSA‐B were at lowest risk for maladjustment. The results highlight the value of examining multiple bioregulatory processes conjointly and suggest that promoting good sleep habits and regulation of physiological arousal should support adolescent adjustment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Bidirectional Relations Between Sleep and Emotional Distress in College Students: Loneliness as a Moderator.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E. and Macdonald-Gagnon, Grace E.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *MENTAL illness , *COLLEGE students , *SLEEP , *LONELINESS - Abstract
Mental health symptoms are of increasing concern among college students in the United States and are often associated with insufficient sleep. However, the predictive relations between sleep and mental health are not well understood. The present study examined the daily, bidirectional associations between multiple sleep variables (subjective rating of morning restedness, objective measurement of nighttime sleep minutes) and college students' feelings of emotional distress. Self-reported loneliness was assessed as a moderator of these bidirectional relations. Participants were 101 undergraduate students (80% women) attending a liberal arts college in the northeastern United States. Students wore an actigraph to monitor nighttime sleep minutes across four weeknights (Monday–Thursday). They self-reported loneliness on the first day of the study and completed daily electronic assessments regarding restedness and emotional distress (worry, stress) each day for the remainder of the week. Multilevel modeling analyses demonstrated that greater restedness was predictive of less worry and stress that day. Further, the associations between better sleep (more rested, more nighttime sleep minutes) and less distress were stronger for less lonely students. In contrast, none of the distress indices were directly predictive of next-day restedness or nighttime sleep minutes, though one significant interaction demonstrated that the association between less worry and feeling more rested the next day was stronger for students who reported low compared to high loneliness. Together, the results point to sleep as a stronger influence on emotional distress than the reverse pathway and may suggest that social connection facilitates the positive influence of good sleep on student mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Socioeconomic status and sleep in adolescence: The role of family chaos.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E, Saini, Ekjyot K, Fuller-Rowell, Thomas E, Buckhalt, Joseph A, and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Abstract
Low socioeconomic status (SES) has been associated with poor sleep in youth, yet mechanisms underlying this association are not well-understood. The present study examined greater chaos as a mediator of associations between low SES and 2 indices of poor sleep. Two hundred fifty-two adolescents (53% girls; 66% White/European American, 34% Black/African American) participated in the 3-wave longitudinal study. The sample was socioeconomically diverse. At age 16, parents reported on 2 indices of SES: family income and perceived economic well-being. Adolescents reported on chaos within their family at age 17 and on 2 key sleep-wake processes-sleep quality and daytime sleepiness-at age 18. Family chaos functioned as a mediating or intervening variable in longitudinal associations between lower SES and both poorer sleep quality and greater daytime sleepiness. The findings suggest the potential utility of targeting family level processes that exemplify chaos, such as unpredictability, noise, and interruptions, to improve sleep among adolescents. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Community violence concerns and adolescent sleep: Physiological regulation and race as moderators.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Buckhalt, Joseph A., and El‐Sheikh, Mona
- Subjects
- *
VIOLENCE in the community , *SINUS arrhythmia , *AMERICANS , *DATING violence , *SLEEP , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *AFRICAN Americans , *RACE - Abstract
Prior work has demonstrated that greater community violence concerns are associated with poor sleep quality among adolescents. However, these effects may not be uniform across all youth. The present study examined the role of individual difference variables, physiological regulation and race, as moderators of risk in the relation between adolescents' community violence concerns and their sleep. Adolescents (N = 219; 55.3% female; 69.9% White/European American, 30.1% Black/African American) participated in the study when they were 18 years old (M = 17.7 years, SD = 1.0). Physiological regulation was assessed via respiratory sinus arrhythmia, a measure of parasympathetic regulation, at rest and in response to a stressor. Adolescents wore actigraphs for 7 nights to assess their sleep duration and quality, and reported on their community violence concerns via a well‐validated questionnaire. Results demonstrated a consistent pattern of interactions, such that African American adolescents who showed less adaptive patterns of regulating physiological arousal experienced shorter sleep duration and poorer sleep quality in the context of greater community violence concerns. Community violence concerns were not associated with sleep for White adolescents. The findings may suggest that race‐related stressors exacerbate risk for poor sleep among African American adolescents who experience more community violence concerns and have more difficulty regulating physiological arousal. Coping strategies for managing stress and arousal may be helpful for improving sleep for some youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Neighborhood Economic Deprivation and Social Fragmentation: Associations With Children’s Sleep.
- Author
-
Bagley, Erika J., Fuller-Rowell, Thomas E., Saini, Ekjyot K., Philbrook, Lauren E., and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Subjects
CHILDREN & sleep ,SLEEP deprivation & health ,POOR children ,SOCIAL disorganization ,EUROPEAN American children ,AFRICAN American children - Abstract
Background & Objective: A growing body of work indicates that experiences of neighborhood disadvantage place children at risk for poor sleep. This study aimed to examine how both neighborhood economic deprivation (a measure of poverty) and social fragmentation (an index of instability) are associated with objective measures of the length and quality of children’s sleep. Participants: Participants were 210 children (54.3% boys) living predominantly in small towns and semirural communities in Alabama. On average children were 11.3 years old (SD =.63); 66.7% of the children were European American and 33.3% were African American. The sample was socioeconomically diverse with 67.9% of the participants living at or below the poverty line and 32.1% from lower-middle-class or middle-class families. Methods: Indicators of neighborhood characteristics were derived from the 2012 American Community Survey and composited to create two variables representing neighborhood economic deprivation and social fragmentation. Child sleep period, actual sleep minutes, and efficiency were examined using actigraphy. Results: Higher levels of neighborhood economic deprivation were associated with fewer sleep minutes and poorer sleep efficiency. More neighborhood social fragmentation was also linked with poorer sleep efficiency. Analyses controlled for demographic characteristics, child health, and family socioeconomic status. Conclusions: Findings indicate that living in economically and socially disadvantaged neighborhoods predicts risk for shorter and lower-quality sleep in children. Examination of community context in addition to family and individual characteristics may provide a more comprehensive understanding of the factors shaping child sleep. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Approaches to modeling the development of physiological stress responsivity.
- Author
-
Hinnant, J. Benjamin, Philbrook, Lauren E., Erath, Stephen A., and El‐Sheikh, Mona
- Subjects
- *
PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL model , *PARASYMPATHETIC nervous system , *SINUS arrhythmia , *ARRHYTHMIA - Abstract
Abstract: Influential biopsychosocial theories have proposed that some developmental periods in the lifespan are potential pivot points or opportunities for recalibration of stress response systems. To date, however, there have been few longitudinal studies of physiological stress responsivity and no studies comparing change in physiological stress responsivity across developmental periods. Our goals were to (a) address conceptual and methodological issues in studying the development of physiological stress responsivity within and between individuals, and (b) provide an exemplar for evaluating development of responsivity to stress in the parasympathetic nervous system, comparing respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) responsivity from middle to late childhood with middle to late adolescence. We propose the use of latent growth modeling of stress responsivity that includes time‐varying covariates to account for conceptual and methodological issues in the measurement of physiological stress responsivity. Such models allow researchers to address key aspects of developmental sensitivity including within‐individual variability, mean level change over time, and between‐individual variability over time. In an empirical example, we found significant between‐individual variability over time in RSA responsivity to stress during middle to late childhood but not during middle to late adolescence, suggesting that childhood may be a period of greater developmental sensitivity at the between‐individual level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Sleep duration and RSA suppression as predictors of internalizing and externalizing behaviors.
- Author
-
Cho, Sunghye, Philbrook, Lauren E., Davis, Elizabeth L., and Buss, Kristin A.
- Abstract
Although the conceptual interplay among the biological and clinical features of sleep, arousal, and emotion regulation has been noted, little is understood about how indices of sleep duration and parasympathetic reactivity operate jointly to predict adjustment in early childhood. Using a sample of 123 toddlers, the present study examined sleep duration and RSA reactivity as predictors of internalizing and externalizing behaviors. Parents reported on children's sleep duration and adjustment. RSA reactivity was assessed via children's responses to fear-eliciting stimuli and an inhibitory control challenge. Findings demonstrated that greater RSA suppression to both types of tasks in combination with longer sleep duration was concurrently associated with less internalizing. In contrast, greater RSA augmentation to an inhibitory control task in the context of shorter sleep duration predicted more externalizing 1 year later. The significance of duration of toddlers' sleep as well as the context in which physiological regulatory difficulties occurs is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Associations between bedtime and nighttime parenting and infant cortisol in the first year.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E. and Teti, Douglas M.
- Abstract
We examined how maternal care within the bedtime and nighttime contexts influences infant cortisol levels and patterning. Eighty-two mothers ( M
age = 29.4 years) and infants participated in a longitudinal study when infants were 3, 6, and 9 months old. At each time point, bedtime and nighttime parenting were recorded and infant cortisol at bedtime and the following morning was analyzed. Multilevel model analyses showed that infants had lower cortisol levels when mothers were more emotionally available at bedtime, and infants whose mothers responded more often to their non-distressed cues had lower cortisol levels on average. Less co-sleeping and more maternal responses to infant distress were linked to healthier cortisol patterning. By shedding light on parenting qualities and behaviors that influence infant cortisol, these results indicate avenues for intervention and suggest the utility of studying parenting in infant sleep contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Maternal emotional availability at bedtime and infant cortisol at 1 and 3 months.
- Author
-
Philbrook, Lauren E., Hozella, Alexia C., Kim, Bo-Ram, Jian, Ni, Shimizu, Mina, and Teti, Douglas M.
- Subjects
- *
EMOTIONS , *HYDROCORTISONE , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *INFANT development , *PARENTING , *BEDTIME , *MEDICAL research - Abstract
Background Previous work has shown that early experience influences infant cortisol secretion. Few studies, however, have examined associations between parenting quality and cortisol levels and patterning in very young infants. Aims This study examined linkages between maternal emotional availability (EA) during a routine caregiving task, bedtime, and infant cortisol in the first 3 months of life. Concurrent and longitudinal associations between maternal EA and infant cortisol were examined. Study design Families were visited when their infants were 1 and 3 months old. Video equipment was set up in order to record the infant's bedtime routine. Parents were provided with materials with which to take saliva samples from their infants at late afternoon, bedtime, and the following morning. Subjects At 1 month, participants were 96 mothers and infants living in a rural U.S. state. Data were available for 88 mothers and infants at 3 months. Outcome measures Maternal EA was scored from videotapes of bedtime at each age point. Infant cortisol was assessed from the saliva samples taken by parents. Results Regression analyses indicated that at 1 and 3 months of age, infants of more emotionally available mothers showed lower levels of cortisol secretion across the night than infants of less emotionally available mothers. Additionally, multilevel model analyses indicated that infants of more emotionally available mothers showed greater evidence of a decline in their cortisol levels across the evening, followed by an increase across the nighttime into the morning in their cortisol at 3 months. Conclusions Findings suggest that maternal care in the context of a routine caregiving task is associated with lower stress reactivity and with earlier circadian patterning in very young infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Erratum to: What does a good night's sleep mean? Nonlinear relations between sleep and children's cognitive functioning and mental health.
- Author
-
El-Sheikh, Mona, Philbrook, Lauren E, Kelly, Ryan J, Hinnant, J Benjamin, and Buckhalt, Joseph A
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. What does a good night's sleep mean? Nonlinear relations between sleep and children's cognitive functioning and mental health.
- Author
-
El-Sheikh, Mona, Philbrook, Lauren E, Kelly, Ryan J, Hinnant, J Benjamin, and Buckhalt, Joseph A
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Racial Disparities in Adolescent Sleep Duration: Physical Activity as a Protective Factor.
- Author
-
Gillis, Brian T., Shimizu, Mina, Philbrook, Lauren E., and El-Sheikh, Mona
- Subjects
- *
SLEEP duration , *BLACK youth , *PHYSICAL activity , *AFRICAN American youth , *RACIAL inequality - Abstract
Objectives: Short sleep duration compromises adolescents' functioning across many domains, yet risk for short sleep is not evenly distributed among youth in the United States. Significant Black–White disparities in sleep duration have been observed, with Black/African American youth on average sleeping fewer minutes per night than their White/European American peers. However, not all Black adolescents have short sleep, and identification of moderators of effects, including protective and vulnerability factors in the association between race/ethnicity and sleep duration, is warranted. We examined whether engagement in physical activity attenuates the gap in sleep duration between Black and White teenagers. Method: A sample of 246 adolescents (Mage = 15.79 years; 32.9% Black, 67.1% White) reported on their physical activity and participated in 1 week of at-home actigraphic sleep assessment, which was used to derive sleep duration (minutes scored as asleep from sleep onset to wake time). Results: At higher levels of physical activity, relatively long sleep duration was observed for all youth regardless of their race/ethnicity. However, at lower levels of physical activity, an association emerged between race and sleep minutes, illustrating that youth most at risk for shorter sleep were Black adolescents with lower physical activity. Conclusions: Findings suggest that for Black adolescents, physical activity is a protective factor against short sleep duration and, conversely, low physical activity is a vulnerability factor. Public Significance Statement: On average, Black/African American teenagers sleep less at night than White/European American teens. In our study, physical activity eliminated this difference: Black youth who were more physically active slept as long as White adolescents, using an objective measurement of sleep. Further, Black youth with lower levels of physical activity tended to have the shortest sleep. Thus, increasing physical activity may be one avenue for promoting longer sleep, especially among Black adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Perceptions of Falling Behind "Most White People": Within-Group Status Comparisons Predict Fewer Positive Emotions and Worse Health Over Time Among White (but Not Black) Americans.
- Author
-
Caluori, Nava, Cooley, Erin, Brown-Iannuzzi, Jazmin L., Klein, Emma, Lei, Ryan F., Cipolli, William, and Philbrook, Lauren E.
- Subjects
- *
WHITE people , *ANTI-Black racism , *SLEEP quality , *AFRICAN Americans , *EMOTIONS , *CENSUS - Abstract
Despite the persistence of anti-Black racism, White Americans report feeling worse off than Black Americans. We suggest that some White Americans may report low well-being despite high group-level status because of perceptions that they are falling behind their in-group. Using census-based quota sampling, we measured status comparisons and health among Black (N = 452, Wave 1) and White (N = 439, Wave 1) American adults over a period of 6 to 7 weeks. We found that Black and White Americans tended to make status comparisons within their own racial groups and that most Black participants felt better off than their racial group, whereas most White participants felt worse off than their racial group. Moreover, we found that White Americans' perceptions of falling behind "most White people" predicted fewer positive emotions at a subsequent time, which predicted worse sleep quality and depressive symptoms in the future. Subjective within-group status did not have the same consequences among Black participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The policy implications of feeling relatively low versus high status within a privileged group.
- Author
-
Cooley, Erin, Brown-Iannuzzi, Jazmin L., Lei, Ryan F., Cipolli III, William, and Philbrook, Lauren E.
- Abstract
Research suggests that White Americans oppose welfare due to between-group processes: Many White Americans envision welfare recipients to be lazy, undeserving, and Black, and these perceptions predict reduced welfare support. In the present work, we consider the role of within-group processes that result from complementary beliefs that White people, as a group, are wealthy. Using a nationally representative sample of White and Black Americans (Study 1) and two large samples of White Americans (Study 2 and Study 3; N = 2,000), we find that many White Americans feel relatively lower status than their racial group. Furthermore, these perceived within-group status disparities are associated with reduced stereotyping of welfare recipients as lazy, which mediates greater policy support. Finally, we demonstrate that leading White Americans to take ownership of their racial privilege can increase perceptions of within-group status. And these shifts in within-group status have downstream consequences for attitudes toward welfare recipients and policies (replicating our previous two studies). We conclude that consideration of both between-group and within-group processes may provide a fuller understanding of how group-level privilege shapes White Americans' support (or lack thereof) for hierarchy-attenuating policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Development of 24-hour rhythms in cortisol secretion across infancy: a systematic review and meta-analysis of individual participant data.
- Author
-
Kervezee L, Romijn M, van de Weijer KNG, Chen BSJ, Burchell GL, Tollenaar MS, Tamayo-Ortiz M, Philbrook LE, de Weerth C, Cao Y, Rotteveel J, Eiden RD, Azar R, Bush NR, Chis A, Kmita G, Clearfield MW, Beijers R, Gröschl M, Wudy SA, Kalsbeek A, Mörelius E, and Finken MJJ
- Abstract
Background: In adults, cortisol levels show a pronounced 24-hour rhythm with a peak in the early morning. It is unknown at what age this early-morning peak in cortisol emerges during infancy, hampering the establishment of optimal dosing regimens for hydrocortisone replacement therapy in infants with an inborn form of adrenal insufficiency. Therefore, we aimed to characterize daily variation in salivary cortisol concentration across the first year of life., Methods: We conducted a systematic review followed by an individual participant data meta-analysis of studies reporting on spontaneous (i.e., not stress induced) salivary cortisol concentrations in healthy infants aged 0-1 year. A one-stage approach using linear mixed-effects modelling was used to determine the interaction between age and time of day on cortisol concentrations., Findings: Through the systematic review, 54 eligible publications were identified, reporting on 29,177 cortisol observations. Individual participant data were obtained from 15 study cohorts, combining 17,079 cortisol measurements from 1,904 infants. The morning/evening cortisol ratio increased significantly from 1.7 (95% CI: 1.3-2.1) at birth to 3.7 (95% CI: 3.0-4.5) at 6-9 months (p < 0.0001). Cosinor analysis using all available data revealed the gradual emergence of a 24-hour rhythm during infancy., Interpretation: The early-morning peak in cortisol secretion gradually emerges from birth onwards to form a stable morning/evening ratio from age 6-9 months. This might have implications for hydrocortisone replacement therapy in infants with an inborn form of adrenal insufficiency., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Associations between parental involvement at bedtime and young children's evening cortisol and nighttime sleep.
- Author
-
Philbrook LE
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Parents, Parenting, Arousal, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Sleep physiology
- Abstract
Parents are theorized to play an important role in helping young children to downregulate arousal to achieve sufficient and good-quality sleep. To my knowledge, however, the links between parenting and children's physiological arousal at bedtime and subsequent nighttime sleep have not been empirically tested. The present study examined 3- to 6-year-old children's evening cortisol levels as a pathway linking parental involvement at bedtime to children's nighttime sleep duration and quality. Fifty-one children (53% male, 47% female; 80% White, 18% Biracial, 2% Black) and their families participated. Parental involvement (presence, contact, quiet activities) was assessed by raters from video recordings of one night of bedtime. Children's evening cortisol levels were measured from saliva samples taken at bedtime by parents across three nights. Children's nighttime sleep (minutes, efficiency) was determined from an actigraph worn the same three nights. Path analyses controlling for child and family demographics provided support for three significant indirect effects: lower child evening cortisol acted as a pathway linking greater parental presence at bedtime to more child nighttime sleep minutes and higher sleep efficiency, and lower child evening cortisol also linked greater parental contact at bedtime to higher sleep efficiency. Among this low-risk sample, the findings suggest that encouraging parental involvement in young children's bedtime routine may promote healthy sleep by way of reduced child physiological arousal., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Beyond Licking and Grooming: Maternal Regulation of Infant Stress in the Context of Routine Care.
- Author
-
Hane AA and Philbrook LE
- Abstract
Rodent epigenetic models of early maternal care have demonstrated that natural variations in maternal behavior shape the development of stress reactivity and social behavior in offspring. Rodent models have also revealed the "hidden" regulatory functions of specific dimensions of maternal behavior. Here we present research that has extended rodent models of early care to the study of biobehavioral development in human infants. Research showing contemporaneous and predictive associations between quality of maternal caregiving behavior (MCB) and early biobehavioral development is reviewed. New evidence demonstrating the proximal effects of MCB in early infancy on infant stress reactivity is reported and highlights the value of examining early parenting at the specific behavioral level. Future research should extend this domain-specific approach to the study of infant contributions to the early care environment. Implications for intervention are discussed.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.