The Impact of Protective Factors on the Relationship Between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Facial Affect Recognition
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Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2024
Type of Work
Department
Hood College Department of Psychology and Counseling
Program
Hood College Departmental Honors
Citation of Original Publication
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Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
Abstract
The amount of research focusing on the relationship between facial affect recognition
(FAR) and adverse childhood experience (ACEs) is growing. The aim of the present study was to
investigate the relationship between ACEs and FAR with protective factors as a potential
moderator. Convenience sampling yielded 1058 responses to the Childhood Trauma
Questionnaire - Short Form (CTQ – SF), Protective Factors for Resilience Scale (PFRS), and the
Japanese and Caucasian Facial Expressions of Emotions (JACFEE). It was hypothesized that
ACEs would be associated with higher misclassifications of emotions and protective factors
would be negatively associated with misclassifications. Additionally, it was hypothesized that
protective factors would moderate the relationship between ACEs and FAR, and that certain
types of ACEs would correlate more strongly with certain types of misclassifications. Results
indicated that the number of ACEs significantly predicted increased misclassifications of
emotions and protective factors significantly predicted decreased misclassifications of emotions.
Protective factors moderated the relationship between ACEs and misclassifications of emotions.
The Sexual Abuse ACE had a significant and positive moderate relationship with
misclassifications of emotions. The subsequent ACEs (Emotional Abuse, Physical Abuse,
Emotional Neglect, Physical Neglect) had a significant, but weak relationship with
misclassifications of emotion.