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Vagal Tone and Children’s Delay of Gratification
Author(s) -
Melissa L. SturgeApple,
Jennifer H. Suor,
Patrick T. Davies,
Dante Cicchetti,
Michael A. Skibo,
Fred A. Rogosch
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
psychological science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.641
H-Index - 260
eISSN - 1467-9280
pISSN - 0956-7976
DOI - 10.1177/0956797616640269
Subject(s) - delay of gratification , gratification , psychology , tone (literature) , vagal tone , developmental psychology , socioeconomic status , adaptation (eye) , audiology , social psychology , autonomic nervous system , demography , neuroscience , heart rate , medicine , endocrinology , literature , art , population , sociology , blood pressure
Children from different socioeconomic backgrounds have differing abilities to delay gratification, and impoverished children have the greatest difficulties in doing so. In the present study, we examined the role of vagal tone in predicting the ability to delay gratification in both resource-rich and resource-poor environments. We derived hypotheses from evolutionary models of children's conditional adaptation to proximal rearing contexts. In Study 1, we tested whether elevated vagal tone was associated with shorter delay of gratification in impoverished children. In Study 2, we compared the relative role of vagal tone across two groups of children, one that had experienced greater impoverishment and one that was relatively middle-class. Results indicated that in resource-rich environments, higher vagal tone was associated with longer delay of gratification. In contrast, high vagal tone in children living in resource-poor environments was associated with reduced delay of gratification. We interpret the results with an eye to evolutionary-developmental models of the function of children's stress-response system and adaptive behavior across varying contexts of economic risk.

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