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Neural responses to maternal criticism in healthy youth

Parental criticism can have positive and negative effects on children's and adolescents' behavior; yet, it is unclear how youth react to, understand and process parental criticism. We proposed that youth would engage three sets of neural processes in response to parental criticism includin...

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Published in:Social cognitive and affective neuroscience 2015-07, Vol.10 (7), p.902-912
Main Authors: Lee, Kyung Hwa, Siegle, Greg J, Dahl, Ronald E, Hooley, Jill M, Silk, Jennifer S
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Language:English
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creator Lee, Kyung Hwa
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description Parental criticism can have positive and negative effects on children's and adolescents' behavior; yet, it is unclear how youth react to, understand and process parental criticism. We proposed that youth would engage three sets of neural processes in response to parental criticism including the following: (i) activating emotional reactions, (ii) regulating those reactions and (iii) social cognitive processing (e.g. understanding the parent's mental state). To examine neural processes associated with both emotional and social processing of parental criticism in personally relevant and ecologically valid social contexts, typically developing youth were scanned while they listened to their mother providing critical, praising and neutral statements. In response to maternal criticism, youth showed increased brain activity in affective networks (e.g. subcortical-limbic regions including lentiform nucleus and posterior insula), but decreased activity in cognitive control networks (e.g. dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and caudal anterior cingulate cortex) and social cognitive networks (e.g. temporoparietal junction and posterior cingulate cortex/precuneus). These results suggest that youth may respond to maternal criticism with increased emotional reactivity but decreased cognitive control and social cognitive processing. A better understanding of children's responses to parental criticism may provide insights into the ways that parental feedback can be modified to be more helpful to behavior and development in youth.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aging - psychology
Cerebral Cortex - physiology
Child
Cognition - physiology
Emotions
Female
Gyrus Cinguli - physiology
Humans
Limbic System - physiology
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Mothers
Nerve Net - physiology
Nervous System Physiological Phenomena - physiology
Original
Parent-Child Relations
Prefrontal Cortex - physiology
Self Report
Social Perception
title Neural responses to maternal criticism in healthy youth
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