Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal: on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy.


Citation

Wass, S.V., Clackson, K. & Leong, V. (2018). Increases in arousal are more long-lasting than decreases in arousal: on homeostatic failures during emotion regulation in infancy. Infancy 23 (5), 628-649. https://doi.org/10.1111/infa.12243

 

Download PDF

Access Link

Previous
Previous

Parental neural responsivity to infants’ visual attention: how mature brains scaffold immature brains during social interaction.

Next
Next

Infants’ visual sustained attention is higher during joint play than solo play: is this due to increased endogenous attention control or exogenous stimulus capture?