1. Differential role of negative and positive parenting styles on resting-state brain networks in middle-aged adolescents.
- Author
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Lee, Seulgi, Choi, Haemi, Park, Min-Hyeon, and Park, Bumhee
- Subjects
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REWARD (Psychology) , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *PARENTING , *LARGE-scale brain networks , *PRINCIPAL components analysis - Abstract
Parenting styles encompass negative and positive approaches, potentially affecting adolescents' brain reward and emotion regulation systems. However, the association between parenting style and brain networks remains unknown. This study investigates the link between parenting style and functional connectivity (FC) within the reward and emotion regulation brain networks, using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). A total of forty-two middle-aged adolescents (26 males; 16 females) with no neurological or psychiatric symptoms participated in this study. We assessed parenting behaviors and extracted reward/emotion regulation FC from rs-fMRI. We examined the association between FC and parenting style, identified through principal component analysis. Correlation analysis investigated these links while controlling for sex. We delineated both positive (love-autonomy) and negative (hostility-control) parenting styles, accounting for 79 % of the explained variance in parenting behaviors. The negative parenting style displayed connections with FC within the reward system, particularly in the left nucleus accumbens (NAc), showcasing links to multiple frontal regions. Furthermore, it correlated with the social reward network, specifically the insula-NAc FC in bilateral hemispheres. Conversely, the positive parenting style exhibited an association with FC between the hippocampus and right lateral prefrontal cortex. Our findings support negative parenting's association with an immature reward system and suggest positive parenting's potential to enhance emotion regulation in brain function. These observations highlight two distinct parenting styles, including single-parenting behaviors. Thus, we advance understanding of each style's unique contributions to adolescent reward- and emotion regulation-related brain network development. • We identified positive (love-autonomy) and negative (hostility-control) parenting style components. • Negative style component was related to functional connectivity in the reward system during adolescence. • Positive style component was associated with brain network of emotion regulation. • Advanced insights into the differential roles of parenting style in brain functions during adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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