Emotion Regulation in Context: Situational Effects on Infant and Caregiver Behavior
Alison L. Miller
E. P. Bradley Hospital, Brown University School of Medicine
Susan C. McDonough, Katherine L. Rosenblum, and Arnold J. Sameroff
Center for Human Growth and Development , University of Michigan

Emotion regulation is an important developmental task of the early years of life. However, situational effects are rarely examined. In this study, we evaluated situational effects on 7-month-olds’ and their mothers’ emotional expression and interactive regulation behavior, individual differences across situations, and intercorrelations within situations. Mother–infant dyads (N = 225) were observed interacting during episodes from play, teaching, and still-face situations that varied along 2 developmentally salient dimensions: emotional challenge (low vs. high), and attentional focus (face-to-face vs. object). Attentional focus affected mothers’ behavior, whereas both challenge and attentional focus affected infants. Associations between mother and infant behaviors varied in each situation. High-challenge situations provided more consistent individual differences in infants and more negative behavior from mothers. Findings have implications for appropriate assessment of emotion regulation in infancy.