Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Regina Hiraoka is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Regina Hiraoka.


Psychological Assessment | 2012

Assessing Psychological Inflexibility: The Psychometric Properties of the Avoidance and Fusion Questionnaire for Youth in Two Adult Samples.

Thomas A. Fergus; David P. Valentiner; Michael J. Gillen; Regina Hiraoka; Michael P. Twohig; Jonathan S. Abramowitz; Patrick B. McGrath

The current study examined whether the Avoidance and Fusion Questionnaire for Youth (AFQ-Y; L. A. Greco, W. Lambert, & R. A. Baer, 2008), a self-report measure of psychological inflexibility for children and adolescents, might be useful for measuring psychological inflexibility for adults. The psychometric properties of the AFQ-Y were examined using data from a college student sample (N = 387) and a clinical sample of patients with anxiety disorders (N = 115). The AFQ-Y, but not the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-II (AAQ-II; F. W. Bond et al., in press), demonstrated a reading level at or below the recommended 5th or 6th grade reading level. The AFQ-Y also demonstrated adequate reliability (internal consistency), factorial validity, convergent and discriminant validity, and concurrent validity predicting psychological symptoms. Moreover, the AFQ-Y showed incremental validity over the AAQ-II in predicting several psychological symptom domains. Implications for the assessment of psychological inflexibility are discussed.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2013

Child physical abuse risk moderates spontaneously inferred traits from ambiguous child behaviors

Randy J. McCarthy; Julie L. Crouch; John J. Skowronski; Joel S. Milner; Regina Hiraoka; Ericka Rutledge; Jade S. Jenkins

The present study examined whether parents at high-risk for child physical abuse (CPA) differed from low-risk parents in their tendency to infer positive traits and negative traits from childrens behaviors. The final sample consisted of 58 (25 low CPA risk and 33 high CPA risk) parents. Parents completed a false-recognition task, which involved viewing behavior descriptions paired with child photographs. Half of the behavior descriptions vaguely/strongly implied a trait and half of the implied traits were positive/negative. The contributions of automatic processes and controlled processes to task performance were examined using process dissociation procedures. Low CPA risk parents were significantly less likely to indicate negative traits were present in behavioral descriptions of children when negative traits were vaguely (compared to strongly) implied. In contrast, high CPA risk parents were equally likely to indicate negative traits were present regardless of whether the traits were vaguely or strongly implied. For low (but not high) CPA risk parents, automatic processes contributed significantly less to task performance when negative traits were vaguely implied compared to when the same traits were strongly implied. Given that parenting involves negotiating a seemingly endless series of ambiguous behaviors as children grow and develop, the capacity to refrain from automatically attributing negative traits to children when they exhibit vaguely negative behaviors may serve an important function in reducing risk of aggressive parenting behavior.


Child Maltreatment | 2016

Baseline Functioning and Stress Reactivity in Maltreating Parents and At-Risk Adults Review and Meta-Analyses of Autonomic Nervous System Studies

Sophie Reijman; Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg; Regina Hiraoka; Julie L. Crouch; Joel S. Milner; Lenneke R. A. Alink; Marinus H. van IJzendoorn

We reviewed and meta-analyzed 10 studies (N = 492) that examined the association between (risk for) child maltreatment perpetration and basal autonomic activity, and 10 studies (N = 471) that examined the association between (risk for) child maltreatment and autonomic stress reactivity. We hypothesized that maltreating parents/at-risk adults would show higher basal levels of heart rate (HR) and skin conductance (SC) and lower levels of HR variability (HRV) and would show greater HR and SC stress reactivity, but blunted HRV reactivity. A narrative review showed that evidence from significance testing within and across studies was mixed. The first set of meta-analyses revealed that (risk for) child maltreatment was associated with higher HR baseline activity (g = 0.24), a possible indication of allostatic load. The second set of meta-analyses yielded no differences in autonomic stress reactivity between maltreating/at-risk participants and nonmaltreating/low-risk comparison groups. Cumulative meta-analyses showed that positive effects for sympathetic stress reactivity as a risk factor for child maltreatment were found in a few early studies, whereas each subsequently aggregated study reduced the combined effect size to a null effect, an indication of the winner’s curse. Most studies were underpowered. Future directions for research are suggested.


Journal of Family Violence | 2012

Does Attentional Control Mediate the Association Between Adverse Early Experiences and Child Physical Abuse Risk

Julie L. Crouch; Christopher R. Shelton; Joseph R. Bardeen; Regina Hiraoka; Joel S. Milner; John J. Skowronski

The present study examined the extent to which attentional control mediates the relationship between adverse early life experiences (e.g., harsh discipline, low perceived support) and child physical abuse (CPA) risk in adulthood. Participants included 138 general population parents (30.4% fathers and 69.6% mothers) who completed self-report measures of early life experiences, attentional control, and CPA risk. Results revealed that attentional control partially mediated the association between adverse early environment and CPA risk scores, Sobel test = 2.65, SE = 0.86, p = .007. More specifically, individuals exposed to adverse early environments (characterized by harsh discipline and/or low perceived support) reported lower levels of attentional control, which in turn was associated with increased risk of hostile, aggressive, and abusive parenting.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2016

Borderline personality features and emotion regulation deficits are associated with child physical abuse potential

Regina Hiraoka; Julie L. Crouch; Gim Reo; Michael F. Wagner; Joel S. Milner; John J. Skowronski

The present study extends prior research examining the association between borderline personality disorder (BPD) features and child physical abuse (CPA) risk. We hypothesized that: (1) high CPA risk parents (compared to low CPA risk parents) would more often report clinically elevated levels of BPD features; (2) high CPA risk parents with elevated BPD features would represent a particularly high-risk subgroup; and (3) the association between elevated BPD features and CPA risk would be partially explained by emotion regulation difficulties. General population parents (N=106; 41.5% fathers) completed self-report measures of BPD features, CPA risk, and emotion regulation difficulties. Results support the prediction that BPD features are more prevalent among high (compared to low) CPA risk parents. Among the parents classified as high CPA risk (n=45), one out of three (33.3%) had elevated BPD features. In contrast, none of the 61 low CPA risk parents reported elevated BPD symptoms. Moreover, 100% of the parents with elevated BPD features (n=15) were classified as high-risk for CPA. As expected, high CPA risk parents with elevated BPD features (compared to high CPA risk parents with low BPD features) obtained significantly higher scores on several Child Abuse Potential Inventory scales, including the overall abuse scale (d=1.03). As predicted, emotion regulation difficulties partially explained the association between BPD features and CPA risk. Findings from the present study suggest that a subset of high CPA risk parents in the general population possess clinically significant levels of BPD symptoms and these parents represent an especially high-risk subgroup. Interventions designed to address BPD symptoms, including emotion regulation difficulties, appear to be warranted in these cases.


Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy | 2018

A Pilot Study of a 4-Week eHealth-Based Protocol of the Attention Training Technique Component of Metacognitive Therapy Among Patients With Anxiety Disorders

Thomas A. Fergus; Regina Hiraoka

The attention training technique (ATT) component of metacognitive therapy seeks to reduce anxiety and strengthen executive attention. ATT has the potential to expand mental health service delivery, with researchers labeling ATT as a possible form of eHealth. However, the only known published study to examine ATT in that delivery capacity was not supportive of its use. The current pilot study examined a new 4-week eHealth-based protocol of ATT among a small mixed sample of patients with anxiety disorders (N = 16). Patients attended a single in-person session to practice ATT and then practiced ATT remotely by accessing a standardized recording of ATT through the Internet for 4 weeks. There was no attrition and over 80% of patients achieved the practice benchmark. Improvements were noted across clinician-rated, patient-rated, and performance-based outcomes. Results support further examination of ATT as a possible eHealth treatment for anxiety disorders. Recommendations for future research are discussed.


Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2015

Heart Rate and Heart Rate Variability in Parents at Risk for Child Physical Abuse

Julie L. Crouch; Regina Hiraoka; Thomas R. McCanne; Gim Reo; Michael F. Wagner; Alison Krauss; Joel S. Milner; John J. Skowronski

The present study examined heart rate and heart rate variability (i.e., respiratory sinus arrhythmia [RSA]) in a sample of 48 general population parents (41.7% fathers), who were either at high risk (n = 24) or low risk (n = 24) for child physical abuse. During baseline assessments of heart rate and RSA, parents sat quietly for 3 min. Afterward, parents were presented with a series of anagrams (either easy or difficult) and were instructed to solve as many anagrams as possible in 3 min. As expected, high-risk (compared with low-risk) parents evinced significantly higher resting heart rate and significantly lower resting RSA. During the anagram task, high-risk parents did not evince significant changes in heart rate or RSA relative to baseline levels. In contrast, low-risk parents evinced significant increases in heart rate and significant decreases in RSA during the anagram task. Contrary to expectations, the anagram task difficulty did not moderate the study findings. Collectively, this pattern of results is consistent with the notion that high-risk parents have chronically higher levels of physiological arousal relative to low-risk parents and exhibit less physiological flexibility in response to environmental demands. High-risk parents may benefit from interventions that include components that reduce physiological arousal and increase the capacity to regulate arousal effectively.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2011

Event-related potentials: Search for positive and negative child-related schemata in individuals at low and high risk for child physical abuse

Joel S. Milner; Mandy M. Rabenhorst; Thomas R. McCanne; Julie L. Crouch; John J. Skowronski; Matthew T. Fleming; Regina Hiraoka; Heather J. Risser


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2008

An Experimental Test of a Craving Management Technique for Adolescents in Substance-abuse Treatment

Paul Florsheim; Sarah Heavin; Stephen T. Tiffany; Peter J. Colvin; Regina Hiraoka


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2014

Pain tolerance, pain sensitivity, and accessibility of aggression-related schemata in parents at-risk for child physical abuse

Regina Hiraoka; Julie L. Crouch; Gim Reo; Michael F. Wagner; Joel S. Milner; John J. Skowronski

Collaboration


Dive into the Regina Hiraoka's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joel S. Milner

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julie L. Crouch

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John J. Skowronski

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ericka Rutledge

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gim Reo

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael F. Wagner

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David P. Valentiner

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas A. Fergus

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas R. McCanne

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alison Krauss

Northern Illinois University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge