Meter Diana J, Ehrenreich Samuel E, Underwood Marion K
Utah State University, 2905 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322, USA.
University of Nevada Reno, Reno, NV, USA.
J Child Fam Stud. 2019 Jan;28(1):140-151. doi: 10.1007/s10826-018-1240-z. Epub 2018 Sep 13.
Parent-child interactions and parenting behavior may be related to social aggression among adolescents, and adolescents' social aggression may relate to parents' social aggression. This study investigated (a) whether parent psychological control predicted future adolescent and parent social aggression in their own peer relationships, (b) whether parents' social aggression was related to their use of psychological control within the parent-adolescent relationship (c) whether adolescents' and parents' social aggression was associated with changes in each other's social aggression over time, and (d) change in psychological control. Participants were 174 racially/ethnically diverse parent-adolescent dyads assessed longitudinally for four years. Adolescents were approximately 15-years-old at the first time point. The adolescent sample was 52% girls and 56% identified as White, 22% as Black or African American, 16% as Hispanic, and 5% as mixed race/ ethnicity. Ten percent of the parent participants were fathers. Parents self-reported their psychological control and social aggression, and their adolescents' teachers reported adolescents' social aggression. Hypotheses were tested using longitudinal structural equation modeling and a latent growth curve analysis. The hypothesized effect of parent's psychological control on parent's future aggression with their own peers was supported. Psychological control positively predicted parent aggression from T2 to T3 ( = .28, < .05) and from T3 to T4 ( = .37, < .05). Other hypotheses were not supported. The findings suggest that the parent-child relationship may influence the parent's functioning in their own peer relationships. Parents' peer relations seem to have important implications for their own wellbeing and the parent-child relationship.
亲子互动和养育行为可能与青少年的社交攻击行为有关,而青少年的社交攻击行为可能与父母的社交攻击行为有关。本研究调查了:(a)父母的心理控制是否能预测青少年及其父母在自身同伴关系中未来的社交攻击行为;(b)父母的社交攻击行为是否与其在亲子关系中使用心理控制有关;(c)青少年和父母的社交攻击行为是否与彼此社交攻击行为随时间的变化相关;以及(d)心理控制的变化。研究参与者为174对不同种族/族裔的亲子二元组,进行了为期四年的纵向评估。青少年在第一个时间点时大约15岁。青少年样本中52%为女孩,56%被认定为白人,22%为黑人或非裔美国人,16%为西班牙裔,5%为混血种族/族裔。10%的父母参与者为父亲。父母自我报告他们的心理控制和社交攻击行为,青少年的教师报告青少年的社交攻击行为。研究假设通过纵向结构方程模型和潜在增长曲线分析进行检验。父母心理控制对其自身未来与同伴的攻击行为的假设效应得到了支持。心理控制正向预测了从T2到T3时父母的攻击行为(β = .28,p < .05)以及从T3到T4时父母的攻击行为(β = .37,p < .05)。其他假设未得到支持。研究结果表明,亲子关系可能会影响父母在自身同伴关系中的功能。父母的同伴关系似乎对他们自身的幸福感和亲子关系具有重要意义。