Human Development and Family Studies Department, Purdue University, 1202W. State Street, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA.
J Youth Adolesc. 2018 Dec;47(12):2535-2553. doi: 10.1007/s10964-018-0892-8. Epub 2018 Jul 10.
Adolescents' reports of parental differential treatment have been linked to increased externalizing behaviors. The current study investigated whether adolescent self-esteem and sibling relationship characteristics (age-spacing and sibling relationship quality) moderated associations between parental differential treatment and later externalizing behavior. Data was gathered at two assessments from 708 sibling pairs (94% White; 51% male; same-gender pairs <4 years apart in age). Older/younger siblings were aged M = 13.5/12.1 and M = 16.2/14.7 years. We found that higher levels of maternal differential treatment predicted greater residualized gains in externalizing behavior among older siblings who were (a) the same age as their sibling or near-to and had low self-esteem or (b) three years older than their sibling and had higher self-esteem. Higher levels of paternal differential treatment predicted greater residual gains in externalizing for older siblings with wider age ranges (regardless of self-esteem), and among older siblings with high levels of self-esteem (regardless of age difference). Surprisingly, maternal differential treatment was protective in one case: for adolescents with low self-esteem who were at least three years older than their siblings, maternal differential treatment predicted reduced externalizing behaviors. Paternal differential treatment was protective for more youth than maternal differential treatment: older siblings with low self-esteem who experienced paternal differential treatment exhibited decreased externalizing behaviors across adolescence, regardless of age difference. The findings highlight the importance of self-esteem and sibling age-spacing as particularly salient contextual influences in older siblings' perceptions of maternal and paternal differential treatment, and that maternal and especially paternal differential treatment does not always serve as a risk factor for externalizing problems.
青少年报告的父母差异对待与外化行为增加有关。本研究探讨了青少年自尊和兄弟姐妹关系特征(年龄间隔和兄弟姐妹关系质量)是否调节了父母差异对待与后来外化行为之间的关系。数据来自 708 对兄弟姐妹(94%为白人;51%为男性;同性别兄弟姐妹年龄相差不到 4 岁)的两次评估。哥哥/姐姐的年龄 M=13.5/12.1,M=16.2/14.7 岁。我们发现,母亲差异对待水平越高,与兄弟姐妹年龄相同或接近且自尊较低的哥哥/姐姐的外化行为残留增益越大,或者比兄弟姐妹大三岁且自尊较高的哥哥/姐姐的外化行为残留增益越大。父亲差异对待水平越高,年龄差距较大(无论自尊水平如何)的哥哥/姐姐的外化行为残留增益越大,以及自尊水平较高(无论年龄差异如何)的哥哥/姐姐的外化行为残留增益越大。令人惊讶的是,母亲差异对待在一种情况下具有保护作用:对于自尊较低且比兄弟姐妹至少大三岁的青少年,母亲差异对待预示着外化行为减少。父亲差异对待对更多的青少年有保护作用,而不是母亲差异对待:经历父亲差异对待且自尊较低的哥哥/姐姐在整个青春期都表现出外化行为减少,无论年龄差异如何。这些发现强调了自尊和兄弟姐妹年龄间隔作为父母差异对待在哥哥/姐姐感知中的重要背景影响,并且母亲和特别是父亲的差异对待并不总是外化问题的风险因素。