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Early temperamental and biological predictors of dimensions of social withdrawal in childhood

Authors :
Geneviève Morneau‐Vaillancourt
Isabelle Ouellet‐Morin
Sandra Pouliot
Natalia Poliakova
Bei Feng
Lysandre Provost
Nadine Forget‐Dubois
Célia Matte‐Gagné
Amélie Petitclerc
Mara R. Brendgen
Frank Vitaro
Richard E. Tremblay
Ginette Dionne
Michel Boivin
Source :
Developmental psychobiologyREFERENCES. 64(8)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Social wariness and preference for solitude, two dimensions of social withdrawal, show unique associations with various socioemotional difficulties in childhood, including internalizing and peer problems. However, their early childhood predictors remain vastly undocumented. The present study aimed to examine whether early indicators of reactivity in situations of unfamiliarity such as behavioral inhibition, affect, and cortisol independently, or in interaction with emotion regulation as indexed by vagal tone, predict later social wariness and preference for solitude. Participants were 1209 children from the Quebec Newborn Twin Study. Vagal tone was assessed at 5 months, and behavioral inhibition, affect, and cortisol were assessed at 19 months in situations of unfamiliarity. Mothers, teachers, and peers evaluated social wariness and preference for solitude repeatedly from 4 to 10 years old. Findings show that three temperamental dimensions, social inhibition, nonsocial inhibition, and affect accounted for the variability in reactions to unfamiliarity. Behavioral inhibition to social unfamiliarity at 19 months predicted social wariness during the preschool years. Poor vagal regulation at 5 months exacerbated the risk associated with negative affect at 19 months to predict preference for solitude during the preschool years. Overall, results show that social wariness and preference for solitude may follow different developmental pathways.

Details

ISSN :
10982302
Volume :
64
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental psychobiologyREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b84a9f764b6bccf3c094aa189ae2368e