The MacArthur Story Stem Battery was used to examine maternal and self-representations in
neglected, physically abused, sexually abused, and nonmaltreated comparison preschool children.
The narratives of maltreated children contained more negative maternal representations and more
negative self-representations than did the narratives of nonmaltreated children. Maltreated
children also were more controlling with and less responsive to the examiner. In examining the
differential impact of maltreatment subtype differences on maternal and self-representations,
physically abused children evidenced the most negative maternal representations; they also had
more negative self-representations than nonmaltreated children. Sexually abused children
manifested more positive self-representations than neglected children. Despite these differences
in the nature of maternal and self-representations, physically and sexually abused children both
were more controlling and less responsive to the examiner. The investigation adds to the corpus
of knowledge regarding disturbances in the self-system functioning of maltreated children and
provides support for relations between representational models of self and other and the
self-organizing function that these models exert on children's lives.
Dissociation reflects disruptions in the integration of memories, perception, and identity into a
coherent sense of self, and may develop following childhood maltreatment. The preschool years
were identified as an important period for the development of dissociation. However, prior
research has not examined the development of dissociation during this time. In order to address
this gap, evidence of dissociation in 45 maltreated children, assessed for sexual abuse, physical
abuse, and neglect, was compared with dissociation in 33 nonmaltreated children. Rather than
depend on adult observer reports of behavior, the study sought to gain an understanding of
dissociation from the child's own point of view. Because self-reports have limitations with
such young children, a measure of dissociation evidenced in children's narrative story-stem
completions was utilized. Maltreated children, especially physically abused children and sexually
abused children, demonstrated more dissociation than did nonmaltreated children. Moreover,
during the preschool period maltreated and nonmaltreated children followed different trajectories
such that dissociation increased for maltreated children but did not do so for nonmaltreated
children. Findings suggest that although the self is normatively integrated during the preschool
period, it becomes increasingly fragmented for some maltreated children. Results are discussed in
terms of cascading effects of maltreatment throughout development, and the importance of
developmentally sensitive interventions.
This study examined narrative representations of parents and of self, as well as child behavior during the assessment, in maltreated (N = 56) and demographically comparable non-maltreated (N = 37) pre-school-aged children in a one-year longitudinal study. Maltreated children evidenced more negative representations of parents and of self at Time 2, including the juxta-position of both a negative and a grandiose self. Over time there was a marginal interaction such that maltreated children portrayed fewer disciplining parent representations and nonmaltreated children portrayed more. Also over time, maltreated children portrayed marginally more grandiose self-representations and nonmaltreated children fewer. Furthermore, maltreated children demonstrated less responsivity to the examiner over time and nonmaltreated children demonstrated more. The deleterious effects of maltreatment on representations of self and of others, especially as development proceeds, are discussed, and the importance of providing attachment-informed intervention prior to the consolidation of these negative representations is highlighted.
A total of 80 low-socioeconomic status maltreated preschoolers were contrasted with 27 nonmaltreated preschoolers on their narrative representations. The children completed story stems, taken from the MacArthur Story-Stem Battery (MSSB; I. Bretherton, D. Oppenheim, H. Buchsbaum, R. N. Emde, & the MacArthur Narrative Group, 1990), that introduced stressful family situations. Using the MacArthur narrative coding manual (J. Robinson, L. Mantz-Simmons, J. Macfie, & the MacArthur Narrative Group, 1992), coders rated portrayals of parental and child character responses, as well as participant responses, to relieve children's distress. They also rated role reversal (children caretaking their parents) from the narrative emotion coding manual (S. L. Warren, L. Mantz-Simmons, & R. N. Emde, 1993). Maltreated preschoolers portrayed parents and children as responding less often--yet themselves as stepping into the story more often to relieve children's distress--than did nonmaltreated preschoolers. Abused children (sexually, physically, or both) portrayed the most participant responses, and neglected children (with no abuse) portrayed the fewest child responses. Role reversal was associated with physical abuse.
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) represents a severe distortion in the development of attachment, self, and emotion regulation. Study of children at high risk of developing BPD may inform precursors to BPD. In a low socioeconomic status sample of 30 children aged 4–7 whose mothers have BPD and 30 normative comparisons, representations of the caregiver–child relationship and of the self, and emotion regulation were assessed with a story-stem completion measure. In contrast to comparisons and controlling for major depressive disorder, children whose mothers have BPD told stories with the following: (a) more parent–child role reversal, more fear of abandonment, and more negative mother–child and father–child relationship expectations; (b) more incongruent and shameful representations of the self; and (c) poorer emotion regulation indicated by more confusion of boundaries between fantasy and reality and between self and fantasy, more fantasy proneness, less narrative coherence, and marginally more intrusion of traumatic themes. In the sample as a whole, (a) a maladaptive caregiver–child relationship composite was associated with maternal identity disturbance and self-harm; (b) a maladaptive self-composite was associated with maternal self-harm; and (c) a maladaptive emotion regulation composite was associated with maternal identity disturbance, negative relationships, and self-harm. Results are discussed in terms of putative precursors to BPD and preventive interventions.
Examined whether maltreated preschoolers are more likely than nonmaltreated preschoolers to have fewer moral-affiliative and more conflictual narrative representations and whether these representations mediate child behavior problems. A structured narrative story-telling task was administered to assess representations, and independent ratings of behavior problems were obtained from teachers. The narratives of maltreated children contained more conflictual and fewer moral-affiliative themes. Maltreated children also exhibited more internalizing and externalizing behavior problems. A partial mediation effect of conflictual representations on the relation between child maltreatment and externalizing behavior problems was found. The results demonstrate the relation between child maltreatment and children's organization of their life experiences and their behavioral symptomatology.
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