Aggressive marital conflict and harsh parenting (family aggression) are highly prevalent. Chronic exposure to family aggression elevates adolescents' risk for antisocial and risky behavior, depressed mood, and cognitive decrements - significant public health problems that increase in prevalence and severity during adolescence. Explaining variability in trajectories of adaptation in the context of family aggression - why some adolescent's exhibit resilience and others deteriorate - is a critical need for science and practice. Findings stemming from the proposed study will illuminate autonomic nervous system activity and sleep regulation variables (bioregulatory processes), as well as economic and social context (peer affiliation) variables, which may mediate the risk of family aggression or operate to exacerbate or protect against its effects on cognitive, emotional, and behavioral maladjustment from late childhood through late adolescence. The design builds on a well-characterized 3-wave study; children ranged between 8-11 years across waves. The proposed study will involve 3 additional waves with a 1-year lag: 50% girls, ~14-15 years at T4, with high representation of both African-American and lower SES families. Study constructs are assessed with multiple informants and measures. Sleep parameters are examined objectively, via actigraphy, and subjectively. ANS activity (sympathetic and parasympathetic) is measured with standard indices, and reactivity is assessed with well-established lab procedures. The large and diverse sample, breadth of measurement across important adolescent outcome domains, and a 6-wave longitudinal design will permit analyses of long- term developmental trajectories, interactions among biopsychosocial processes, and profiles of family, bioregulatory and socioecological risk. The proposed study will create new knowledge in areas of great significance through investigations of bioregularoty and socioecological variables that have the potential to enhance understanding of risk among adolescents exposed to family aggression and to identify physiological, behavioral, and ecological targets for intervention. Outcome variables include public health priorities, such as behavioral and emotional adjustment, academic performance (PA-07-046, Research on Mind-Body Interactions and Health), violence (PA-09-169, Research on Teen Dating Violence), and sleep disturbances (PA-07-140, Research on Sleep and Sleep Disorders). Hypotheses will be tested across a wide range of socioecological contexts with a diverse community sample (PA-07-379, Behavioral and Social Science Research on Understanding and Reducing Health Disparities). Other key strengths include our focus on estimating trajectories of adolescent functioning across multiple domains; considering the direction of effects between constructs; and comparing the strength of associations at different time points across development.

Public Health Relevance

Aggressive marital conflict and harsh parenting are highly prevalent and elevate adolescents' risk for antisocial and risky behavior, depressed mood, and cognitive decrements- significant public health problems that increase in prevalence and severity during adolescence. However, the potential effects of bioregulatory and socioecological variables on trajectories of adolescent adjustment in the context of family aggression are not well understood. The proposed study will illuminate autonomic nervous system activity, sleep regulation, and socioecological variables that may mediate the risk of family aggression or operate to exacerbate or protect against its effects on adolescent functioning across multiple domains from late childhood through late adolescence, which will help identify behavioral, physiological, and ecological targets for prevention and intervention.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD046795-09
Application #
8847748
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Esposito, Layla E
Project Start
2012-08-01
Project End
2016-05-31
Budget Start
2015-06-01
Budget End
2016-05-31
Support Year
9
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Auburn University at Auburn
Department
Other Health Professions
Type
Sch Allied Health Professions
DUNS #
066470972
City
Auburn University
State
AL
Country
United States
Zip Code
36849
Hinnant, J Benjamin; Philbrook, Lauren E; Erath, Stephen A et al. (2018) Approaches to modeling the development of physiological stress responsivity. Psychophysiology 55:e13027
Philbrook, Lauren E; Erath, Stephen A; Hinnant, J Benjamin et al. (2018) Marital conflict and trajectories of adolescent adjustment: The role of autonomic nervous system coordination. Dev Psychol 54:1687-1696
Tu, Kelly M; Elmore-Staton, Lori; Buckhalt, Joseph A et al. (2018) The link between maternal sleep and permissive parenting during late adolescence. J Sleep Res 27:e12676
Tu, Kelly M; Erath, Stephen A; El-Sheikh, Mona (2017) Parental management of peers and autonomic nervous system reactivity in predicting adolescent peer relationships. Dev Psychol 53:540-551
El-Sheikh, Mona; Kelly, Ryan J (2017) Family Functioning and Children's Sleep. Child Dev Perspect 11:264-269
Philbrook, Lauren E; El-Sheikh, Mona (2016) Associations between Neighborhood Context, Physical Activity, and Sleep in Adolescents. Sleep Health 2:205-210
Tu, Kelly M; Erath, Stephen A; El-Sheikh, Mona (2016) Coping responses moderate prospective associations between marital conflict and youth adjustment. J Fam Psychol 30:523-32
Hinnant, J Benjamin; Erath, Stephen A; Tu, Kelly M et al. (2016) Permissive Parenting, Deviant Peer Affiliations, and Delinquent Behavior in Adolescence: the Moderating Role of Sympathetic Nervous System Reactivity. J Abnorm Child Psychol 44:1071-81
Bagley, Erika J; Tu, Kelly M; Buckhalt, Joseph A et al. (2016) Community violence concerns and adolescent sleep. Sleep Health 2:57-62
El?Sheikh, Mona; Tu, Kelly M; Saini, Ekjyot K et al. (2016) Perceived discrimination and youths' adjustment: sleep as a moderator. J Sleep Res 25:70-7

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