New Article: Capturing temporal dynamics of fear behaviors on a moment‐to‐moment basis

Detail of fear seqeunces from several children

One early indicator of psychopathology risk for small children shows up in patterns of fear behaviors. In our new paper Capturing temporal dynamics of fear behaviors on a moment‐to‐moment basis, published in Infancy, we apply discrete sequence methods to data about children’s responses to a fearful situation.

One of the very cool things about this paper is that we identify a few different clusters of child behavior. We were hoping to find a way to identify a high fear group at risk to show dysregulated fear, which has psychopathology implications. We found them to some extent, but also identified some other groups that are interesting: a group of external regulators, who use a parent to help regulate their emotions; one low reactive group, who just aren’t that scared by things; and a cool group called fearful explorers who show fear, but don’t let it stop them from checking things out. This work provides some new data points to help understand the emergence of emotion regulation across child development.

CCSA Conference 2019

Penn State’s Consortium to Combat Substance Abuse (CCSA) had its first annual conference today.  Members of the RTS lab presented a poster there focused on trying to define and understand the process of recovery at a basic level.

One primary focus of the poster was aimed at understanding something called recovery capital.  The idea is pretty straightforward: these are the characteristics of a person, their holdings, and their environment and community that provide support that improves recovery.  One form of recovery capital is traditional capital: if you’ve got the financial resources to be able to, for example, take 90 days off of work to go to a rehab facility, that is one characteristic that can help with your recovery.  But it goes a lot further than that.  Supportive relationships, community support, and a whole suite of other characteristics can contribute to recovery.

There are a wide array of paths to recovery.  One of them that takes advantage of some of these aspects of recovery capital uses recovery communities to provide a variety of these different levels of support, and one application of the Wear-IT project is looking at communities like these and trying to understand what characteristics of these communities make them most effective.

The CCSA conference has turned out to be an amazing event that’s building some great connections.  I’m very much looking forward to how this group advances.  The conference really showed that Penn State, with its ties to prevention, outreach, treatment, and legislature across Commonwealth, really has the potential to have a tremendous impact.