This study, funded by the John Templeton Foundation, will examine birth and the early postpartum period (BEPP) as a transformative life experience that may shift women's experience of emotion in such ways as to a) support enhanced other-oriented emotions and b) underlie risk or resilience from psychopathology.
Specifically, the study will investigate the extent to which women can accurately have knowledge about and predict changes in self- and other-oriented emotion processes associated with BEPP. The investigators will also characterize the extent to which BEPP changes self- and other-oriented emotion processes and self- and other-oriented social behaviors. Further, the investigators will identify distinct trajectories of change in cognitive processes and self- and other-oriented emotion processes related to BEPP, and examine how those trajectories are associated with psychological adjustment (e.g., risk and relapse of psychopathology). Finally, the investigators will identify which particular features of BEPP are related to distinct patterns of change in self- and other-oriented emotion processes.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
150
University of Colorado Boulder
Boulder, Colorado, United States
Occurrence of mood episodes and anxiety disorders
Assessed via interview
Time frame: Throughout study (pregnancy to 6 months postpartum)
Mood and anxiety symptoms
Assessed via questionnaires
Time frame: Throughout study (pregnancy to 6 months postpartum)
Emotion reactivity and regulation
Assessed via questionnaires, experimental tasks, and physiological measurement
Time frame: Throughout study (pregnancy to 6 months postpartum)
Empathic accuracy
Assessed via experimental tasks
Time frame: Throughout study (pregnancy to 6 months postpartum)
Prosocial behavior
Assessed via questionnaires and experimental tasks
Time frame: Throughout study (pregnancy to 6 months postpartum)
Well-being and social support
Assessed via questionnaires
Time frame: Throughout study (pregnancy to 6 months postpartum)
Parenting sensitivity, efficacy, stress, bond with infant
Assessed via questionnaires and behavioral observation
Time frame: Throughout study (pregnancy to 6 months postpartum)
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