ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

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家庭环境不可预测性与青少年生理和心理健康: 学校韧性因素的缓冲作用[压力、韧性与健康专刊]

高倩倩, 陈梅静, 孙佳宁, 李亿佳, 王薇, 向诗媛, 谢明珺, 林丹华   

  1. 北京师范大学心理学部, 北京 100875 中国
    宾夕法尼亚州立大学心理学系, 16802 美国
  • 收稿日期:2025-09-26 修回日期:2026-03-11 接受日期:2026-04-14
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金面上项目(32471116); 青年科学基金项目(32400892)

Family Environmental Unpredictability and Adolescent Physiological and Psychological Health: The Buffering Role of Positive School Climate

Gao Qianqian, Chen Meijing, Sun Jianing, Li Yijia, Wang Wei, Xiang Shiyuan, Xie Mingjun, Lin Danhua   

  1. Faculty of Psychology, Beijing Normal University 100875, China
    Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University 16802, United States
  • Received:2025-09-26 Revised:2026-03-11 Accepted:2026-04-14

摘要: 静态测量的环境不可预测性对青少年健康的影响已得到实证支持。本研究基于统计学习视角,对 211 名学生开展为期两年的四次追踪测量,考察家庭虐待与忽视不可预测性对青少年皮质醇日间斜率和抑郁症状的独特影响,并进一步检验学校积极心理环境作为韧性因素的调节作用。结果显示:(1)虐待不可预测性显著正向预测皮质醇日间斜率,而未显著预测抑郁症状;忽视不可预测性对皮质醇节律和抑郁症状均无显著影响。同时,虐待不可预测性与其平均暴露水平之间的交互作用显著预测抑郁症状。(2)学校安全与秩序缓冲了虐待不可预测性对皮质醇日间斜率的影响,表现为仅在学校安全与秩序水平较低时,虐待不可预测性才显著预测皮质醇日间斜率;此外,学校支持与接纳调节忽视不可预测性与皮质醇节律之间的关系,表现为忽视不可预测性的负面影响仅在低学校支持与接纳较低时显现。上述结果提示,虐待与忽视不可预测性对青少年生理与心理健康的影响可能存在差异,研究结果为面向家庭处境不利青少年的学校情境干预提供了一定的经验证据。

关键词: 家庭环境不可预测性, HPA轴, 抑郁症状, 韧性因素, 学校积极心理环境

Abstract: Childhood environmental unpredictability, defined as the spatial-temporal variation of adverse experiences (Young et al., 2020), has been identified as an essential feature of adversity that has important developmental implications (Ellis et al., 2022). Prior work has linked environmental unpredictability to mental health problems (Koss et al., 2025) and dysregulation of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis (Doom et al., 2024). However, most studies have treated unpredictability as a static construct, overlooking variability in environmental experiences over time. Although the distinct effects of the two important dimensions of childhood adversity—threat and deprivation—on adolescent outcomes are well established (LoPilato et al., 2020; Milojevich et al., 2019), the unique characteristics of unpredictability within these dimensions remains poorly understood. Furthermore, resilience factors that may buffer the negative effects of unpredictability have received little attention. To address these gaps, the present study investigates how unpredictability related to threat (i.e., abuse) and deprivation (i.e., neglect) predicts adolescents’ diurnal cortisol rhythms and depressive symptoms, and whether a positive school climate moderates these associations. The sample consisted of 211 adolescents (T1: Mage = 10.82 years, SD = 0.85; 34.6% girls) who participated in a four-wave longitudinal survey spanning two years. Linear mixed models (LMMs) were estimated to capture trajectories of adversity exposure, and the residuals (the differences between predicted and observed values) at each time point were used to compute the root mean squared error (RMSE) as an indicator of unpredictability in abuse and neglect. Linear regression analyses were then conducted to test both main and interaction effects. For significant interaction effects, the Johnson–Neyman technique was applied to plot the simple slopes across the full range of the moderator. Results indicated that unpredictability in abuse significantly predicted flatter diurnal cortisol slopes but not depressive symptoms. A significant interaction with average abuse levels emerged, such that unpredictability in abuse was associated with fewer depressive symptoms when average abuse exposure was high. Unpredictability in neglect showed no significant associations with either diurnal cortisol rhythms or depressive symptoms. School safety and order moderated the link between abuse-related unpredictability and diurnal cortisol slopes, such that unpredictability in abuse was associated with flatter slopes only when perceived school safety and order were low . Similarly, school support and acceptance moderated the association between neglect-related unpredictability and diurnal cortisol slopes, with effects evident only when school support and acceptance were low. Findings revealed distinct effects of unpredictability within threat (i.e., abuse) and deprivation (i.e., neglect). Specifically, abuse-related (but not neglect-related) unpredictability predicted flatter diurnal cortisol rhythms, above and beyond the effects of average abuse levels. Moreover, the impact of abuse-related unpredictability varied by the average levels of abuse exposure, highlighting the importance of considering broader contextual features including environmental severity, in understanding developmental consequences. A positive school climate emerged as a potential resilience factor with important implications for education and policy. Enhancing school safety and order may be particularly effective in buffering the negative consequences of abuse-related unpredictability for adolescent health, whereas strengthening teacher-student support and acceptance may better mitigate the negative effects of neglect-related unpredictability.

Key words: family environmental unpredictability, HPA axis, depressive symptoms, resilience factors, school climate