75 results on '"Al-Hassan SM"'
Search Results
2. Mother and father socially desirable responding in nine countries: Two kinds of agreement and relations to parenting self-reports
- Author
-
Bornstein MH, Putnick DL, Lansford JE, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Zelli A, Alampay L. P, Al Hassan SM, Bombi AS, Chang L, Deater Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P., BACCHINI, Dario, Bornstein, Mh, Putnick, Dl, Lansford, Je, Pastorelli, C, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Alampay, L. P., Al Hassan, Sm, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, A, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Di Giunta, L, Dodge, Ka, Malone, P, and Oburu, P.
- Published
- 2015
3. Neighborhood Danger, Parental Monitoring, Harsh Parenting, and Child Aggression in Nine Countries
- Author
-
Skinner AT, Lansford JE, Godwin J, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Zelli A, Alampay LP, Al Hassan SM, Bombi AS, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Miranda MC, Oburu P, Pastorelli C., BACCHINI, Dario, Skinner, At, Bacchini, Dario, Lansford, Je, Godwin, J, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Alampay, Lp, Al Hassan, Sm, Bombi, A, Bornstein, Mh, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Di Giunta, L, Dodge, Ka, Malone, P, Miranda, Mc, Oburu, P, and Pastorelli, C.
- Published
- 2014
4. Perceived mother and father acceptance-rejection predict four unique aspects of child adjustment across nine countries
- Author
-
Anna Silvia Bombi, Laura Di Giunta, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Dario Bacchini, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Kenneth A. Dodge, Concetta Pastorelli, Sombat Tapanya, Liane Peña Alampay, Lei Chang, Arnaldo Zelli, Diane L. Putnick, Ann T. Skinner, Jennifer E. Lansford, Emma Sorbring, Paul Oburu, Patrick S. Malone, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Marc H. Bornstein, Putnick, Dl, Bornstein, Mh, Lansford, Je, Malone, P, Pastorelli, C, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Alampay, Lp, Al Hassan, Sm, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, A, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Di Giunta, L, Dodge, Ka, Oburu, P., Putnick, Diane L., Bornstein, Marc H., Lansford, Jennifer E., Malone, Patrick S., Pastorelli, Concetta, Skinner, Ann T., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Uribe Tirado, Liliana Maria, Zelli, Arnaldo, Alampay, Liane Peã±a, Al-hassan, Suha M., Bombi, Anna Silvia, Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, Dodge, Kenneth A., and Oburu, Paul
- Subjects
Male ,Parents ,Philippines ,Developmental psychology ,Fathers ,cross-cultural ,Social desirability bias ,prosocial behavior ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,Mother ,Parenting ,Social distance ,social competence ,behavior problem ,Thailand ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Italy ,Psychological Distance ,Prosocial behavior ,Female ,Social competence ,Rejection, Psychology ,Psychology ,Social Adjustment ,Human ,Parent-Child Relation ,United State ,Adult ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Child Behavior Disorder ,China ,Mothers ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Colombia ,Emotional Adjustment ,Article ,school performance ,Parental acceptance-rejection ,Father ,Humans ,Cross-cultural ,Rejection (Psychology) ,Social Distance ,Philippine ,Sweden ,Jordan ,Kenya ,Cross-cultural studies ,United States ,Country of origin ,Parent ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
Background: It is generally believed that parental rejection of children leads to child maladaptation. However, the specific effects of perceived parental acceptance-rejection on diverse domains of child adjustment and development have been incompletely documented, and whether these effects hold across diverse populations and for mothers and fathers are still open questions. Methods: This study assessed children’s perceptions of mother and father acceptance-rejection in 1,247 families from China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States as antecedent predictors of later internalizing and externalizing behavior problems, school performance, prosocial behavior, and social competence. Results: Higher perceived parental rejection predicted increases in internalizing and externalizing behavior problems and decreases in school performance and prosocial behavior across 3 years controlling for within-wave relations, stability across waves, and parental age, education, and social desirability bias. Patterns of relations ere similar across mothers and fathers and, with a few exceptions, all nine countries. Conclusions: Children’s perceptions of maternal and paternal acceptance-rejection have small but nearly universal effects on multiple aspects of their adjustment and development regardless of the family’s country of origin. Keywords: Parental acceptance-rejection, behavior problems, school performance, prosocial behavior, social competence, cross-cultural.
- Published
- 2014
5. Positive parenting and children's prosocial behavior in eight countries
- Author
-
Emma Sorbring, Jennifer E. Lansford, Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri, Kenneth A. Dodge, Concetta Pastorelli, Maria Concetta Miranda, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Sombat Tapanya, Marc H. Bornstein, Dario Bacchini, Paul Oburu, Ann T. Skinner, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Liane Peña Alampay, Arnaldo Zelli, Lei Chang, Laura Di Giunta, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Patrick S. Malone, Anna Silvia Bombi, Pastorelli, C, Lansford, J. E., Luengo Kanacri, Bp, Malone, P, Di Giunta, L, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, A, Zelli, A, Miranda, Mc, Bornstein, Mh, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, L. M., Alampay, L. P., Al Hassan, Sm, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Dodge, Ka, Oburu, P, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E., Pastorelli, Concetta, Lansford, Jennifer E., Luengo Kanacri, Bernadette Paula, Malone, Patrick S., Di Giunta, Laura, Bombi, Anna Silvia, Zelli, Arnaldo, Miranda, Maria Concetta, Bornstein, Marc H., Tapanya, Sombat, Uribe Tirado, Liliana Maria, Alampay, Liane Pena, Al-hassan, Suha M., Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Dodge, Kenneth A., Oburu, Paul, Skinner, Ann T., and Sorbring, Emma
- Subjects
Mother-Child Relation ,United State ,Male ,Positive discipline ,Philippines ,Child Behavior ,050109 social psychology ,late childhood ,cross-national ,Colombia ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Empirical research ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,positive parenting ,prosocial ,cross national ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Social Behavior ,Philippine ,Sweden ,Jordan ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,Positive parenting ,Late childhood ,Thailand ,Kenya ,Mother-Child Relations ,United States ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Prosocial behavior ,Italy ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Psychology ,Positive Youth Development ,Reciprocal ,Human ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background: Research supports the beneficial role of prosocial behaviors on children’s adjustment and successful youth development. Empirical studies point to reciprocal relations between negative parenting and children’s maladjustment, but reciprocal relations between positive parenting and children’s prosocial behavior are understudied. In this study reciprocal relations between two different dimensions of positive parenting (quality of the mother–child relationship and the use of balanced positive discipline) and children’s prosocial behavior were examined in Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States. Methods: Mother–child dyads (N = 1105) provided data over 2 years in two waves (Mage of child in wave 1 = 9.31 years, SD = 0.73; 50% female). Results: A model of reciprocal relations between parenting dimensions, but not among parenting and children’s prosocial behavior, emerged. In particular, children with higher levels of prosocial behavior at age 9 elicited higher levels of mother–child relationship quality in the following year. Conclusions: Findings yielded similar relations across countries, evidencing that being prosocial in late childhood contributes to some degree to the enhancement of a nurturing and involved mother–child relationship in countries that vary widely on sociodemographic profiles and psychological characteristics. Policy and intervention implications of this study are discussed. Keywords: Prosocial behavior; parenting; cross-national; late childhood.
- Published
- 2016
6. A longitudinal examination of mothers' and fathers' social information processing biases and harsh discipline in nine countries
- Author
-
Concetta Pastorelli, Kenneth A. Dodge, Darren T. Woodlief, Anna Silvia Bombi, Paul Oburu, Laura Di Giunta, Patrick S. Malone, Dario Bacchini, Liane Peña Alampay, Lei Chang, Arnaldo Zelli, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Ann T. Skinner, Sombat Tapanya, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Emma Sorbring, Jennifer E. Lansford, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Marc H. Bornstein, Lansford, Je, Woodlief, D, Malone, P, Oburu, P, Pastorelli, C, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Alampay, Lp, Al Hassan, Sm, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, A, Bornstein, Mh, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Di Giunta, L, Dodge, Ka, Lansford, Jennifer E., Woodlief, Darren, Malone, Patrick S., Oburu, Paul, Pastorelli, Concetta, Skinner, Ann T., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Tirado, Liliana Maria Uribe, Zelli, Arnaldo, Al-hassan, Suha M., Alampay, Liane Peã±a, Bombi, Anna Silvia, Bornstein, Marc H., Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, and Dodge, Kenneth A.
- Subjects
Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Poison control ,Longitudinal Studie ,fathers ,social cognition ,Violence ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Social information processing ,Father ,Child Rearing ,Social cognition ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Mother ,Child rearing ,Parenting ,parental attitudes ,Social perception ,mothers ,child discipline ,Child discipline ,Cross-cultural studies ,Social Perception ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Human - Abstract
This study examined whether parents’ social information processing was related to their subsequent reports of their harsh discipline. Interviews were conducted with mothers (n = 1,277) and fathers (n = 1,030) of children in 1,297 families in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States), initially when children were 7 to 9 years old and again 1 year later. Structural equation models showed that parents’ positive evaluations of aggressive responses to hypothetical childrearing vignettes at Time 1 predicted parents’ self-reported harsh physical and nonphysical discipline at Time 2. This link was consistent across mothers and fathers, and across the nine countries, providing support for the universality of the link between positive evaluations of harsh discipline and parents’ aggressive behavior toward children. The results suggest that international efforts to eliminate violence toward children could target parents’ beliefs about the acceptability and advisability of using harsh physical and nonphysical forms of discipline.
- Published
- 2014
7. Corporal Punishment, Maternal Warmth, and Child Adjustment: A Longitudinal Study in Eight Countries
- Author
-
Liane Peña Alampay, Arnaldo Zelli, Lei Chang, Laura Di Giunta, Darren T. Woodlief, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Marc H. Bornstein, Patrick S. Malone, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Ann T. Skinner, Anna Silvia Bombi, Concetta Pastorelli, Sombat Tapanya, Paul Oburu, Chinmayi Sharma, Dario Bacchini, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Jennifer E. Lansford, Emma Sorbring, Kenneth A. Dodge, Lansford, Jennifer E., Sharma, Chinmayi, Malone, Patrick S., Woodlief, Darren, Dodge, Kenneth A., Oburu, Paul, Pastorelli, Concetta, Skinner, Ann T., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Tirado, Liliana Maria Uribe, Zelli, Arnaldo, Al-hassan, Suha M., Alampay, Liane Peã±a, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, Anna Silvia, Bornstein, Marc H., Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, Lansford, Je, Sharma, C, Malone, P, Woodlief, D, Dodge, Ka, Oburu, P, Pastorelli, C, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Al Hassan, Sm, Alampay, Lp, Bombi, A, Bornstein, Mh, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, and Di Giunta, L.
- Subjects
Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Mother-Child Relation ,United State ,Longitudinal study ,Asia ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poison control ,Mothers ,Child Behavior ,Longitudinal Studie ,Anxiety ,Colombia ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Punishment ,Affection ,Injury prevention ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Qualitative Research ,media_common ,Mother ,Aggression ,medicine.disease ,Kenya ,Mother-Child Relations ,United States ,Clinical Psychology ,Italy ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Corporal punishment ,Clinical psychology ,Human - Abstract
Two key tasks facing parents across cultures are managing children’s behaviors (and misbehaviors) and conveying love and affection. Previous research has found that corporal punishment generally is related to worse child adjustment, whereas parental warmth is related to better child adjustment. This study examined whether the association between corporal punishment and child adjustment problems (anxiety and aggression) is moderated by maternal warmth in a diverse set of countries that vary in a number of sociodemographic and psychological ways. Interviews were conducted with 7- to 10-year-old children (N¼1,196; 51% girls) and their mothers in 8 countries: China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan,Kenya, the Philippines, Thailand, and theUnited States. Follow-up interviews were conducted 1 and 2 years later. Corporal punishment was related to increases, and maternal warmth was related to decreases, in children’s anxiety and aggression over time; however, these associations varied somewhat across groups. Maternal warmth moderated the effect of corporal punishment in some countries, with increases in anxiety over time for children whose mothers were high in both warmth and corporal punishment. The findings illustrate the overall association between corporal punishment and child anxiety and aggression as well as patterns specific to particular countries. Results suggest that clinicians across countries should advise parents against using corporal punishment, even in the context of parent–child relationships that are otherwise warm, and should assist parents in finding other ways to manage children’s behaviors. As primary
- Published
- 2014
8. Parenting Risk and Protective Factors in the Development of Conduct Problems in Seven Countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Godwin J, Rothenberg WA, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Uribe Tirado LM, and Yotanyamaneewong S
- Abstract
This study advances the understanding of risk and protective factors in trajectories of conduct problems in adolescence in seven countries that differ widely on a number of sociodemographic factors as well as norms related to adolescent behavior. Youth- and parent-report data from 988 adolescents in seven countries (Colombia, Italy, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the USA) who were followed longitudinally from ages 10 to 18 (yielding 6872 total data points) were subject to latent class growth analysis. A 4-class model provided the best fit to the data: Late Starters, Alcohol Experimenters, Mid-Adolescent Starters, and Pervasive Risk Takers. The probability of membership in each class differed by country in ways that were generally consistent with country-specific norms and expectations regarding adolescent behavior. Positive parenting was associated with a lower likelihood of adolescents' membership in the Pervasive Risk Takers class, whereas psychological control, monitoring/behavioral control, and autonomy granting were associated with a higher likelihood of membership in the Pervasive Risk Takers class. Associations between parenting and membership in the other classes suggest that some risk taking during adolescence is normative even when parenting is positive., (© 2024. Society for Prevention Research.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Investigating Longitudinal Trajectories of COVID-19 Disruption: Methodological Challenges and Recommendations.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, and Bornstein MH
- Abstract
Relatively few studies have longitudinally investigated how COVID-19 has disrupted the lives and health of youth beyond the first year of the pandemic. This may be because longitudinal researchers face complex challenges in figuring out how to code time, account for changes in COVID-19 spread, and model longitudinal COVID-19-related trajectories across environmental contexts. This manuscript considers each of these three methodological issues by modeling trajectories of COVID-19 disruption in 1080 youth from 12 cultural groups in nine nations between March 2020-July 2022 using multilevel modeling. Our findings suggest that for studies that attempt to examine cross-cultural longitudinal trajectories during COVID-19, starting such trajectories on March 11, 2020, measuring disruption along 6-month time intervals, capturing COVID-19 spread using death rates and the COVID-19 Health and Containment Index scores, and using modeling methods that combine etic and emic approaches are each especially useful. In offering these suggestions, we hope to start methodological dialogues among longitudinal researchers that ultimately result in the proliferation of research on the longitudinal impacts of COVID-19 that the world so badly needs., (© 2024. Society for Prevention Research.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Attachment security, environmental adversity, and fast life history behavioral profiles in human adolescents.
- Author
-
Lu HJ, Lansford JE, Liu YY, Chen BB, Bornstein MH, Skinner AT, Dodge KA, Steinberg L, Deater-Deckard K, Rothenberg WA, Bacchini D, Pastorelli C, Alampay LP, Sorbring E, Gurdal S, Al-Hassan SM, Oburu P, Yotanyamaneewong S, Tapanya S, Di Giunta L, Uribe Tirado LM, and Chang L
- Abstract
One species-general life history (LH) principle posits that challenging childhood environments are coupled with a fast or faster LH strategy and associated behaviors, while secure and stable childhood environments foster behaviors conducive to a slow or slower LH strategy. This coupling between environments and LH strategies is based on the assumption that individuals' internal traits and states are independent of their external surroundings. In reality, individuals respond to external environmental conditions in alignment with their intrinsic vitality, encompassing both physical and mental states. The present study investigated attachment as an internal mental state, examining its role in mediating and moderating the association between external environmental adversity and fast LH strategies. A sample of 1169 adolescents (51% girls) from 9 countries was tracked over 10 years, starting from age 8. The results confirm both mediation and moderation and, for moderation, secure attachment nullified and insecure attachment maintained the environment-LH coupling. These findings suggest that attachment could act as an internal regulator, disrupting the contingent coupling between environmental adversity and a faster pace of life, consequently decelerating human LH.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Cultural values, parenting and child adjustment in Jordan.
- Author
-
Al-Hassan SM
- Subjects
- Humans, Jordan ethnology, Female, Male, Child, Adult, Social Adjustment, Parent-Child Relations ethnology, Adaptation, Psychological, Parenting ethnology, Parenting psychology, Social Values ethnology
- Abstract
This study examined associations between maternal and paternal cultural values (individualism, collectivism and conformity) and parenting dimensions (warmth, psychological control, autonomy granting, rule setting, knowledge solicitation and family obligations) and children's adjustment (internalising and externalising behaviours) in 113 families with children (M
age = 10.8 years) recruited from Zarqa, Jordan. Bivariate correlations and multiple regression analyses were used to examine study question. Results revealed that mothers' individualism was positively correlated with more maternal warmth, more rules/limit-setting and fathers' and children's perceptions regarding children's greater family obligations. Fathers' individualism was not significantly correlated with any parenting or child adjustment variables. Mothers' and fathers' higher collectivism was correlated with more maternal and paternal warmth, respectively; however, mothers' and fathers' higher conformity values were not significantly correlated with any parenting or child adjustment variables. Mothers' collectivism was not associated with any parenting or child adjustment variables after taking into account the other cultural values, child gender and mothers' education; however, fathers' higher collectivism was associated with more paternal warmth, fathers' higher expectations for children's family obligations and less child internalising behaviour. The findings have implications for understanding how cultural values are related to parenting and children's adjustment in Jordan., (© 2024 International Union of Psychological Science.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Individualism, collectivism and conformity in nine countries: Relations with parenting and child adjustment.
- Author
-
Gorla L, Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Breiner K, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Santona A, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, and Uribe Tirado LM
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Adult, Individuality, Social Adjustment, Parent-Child Relations ethnology, Social Values, Parenting psychology, Parenting ethnology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Social Conformity
- Abstract
This study investigated how individualism, collectivism and conformity are associated with parenting and child adjustment in 1297 families with 10-year-old children from 13 cultural groups in nine countries. With multilevel models disaggregating between- and within-culture effects, we examined between- and within-culture associations between maternal and paternal cultural values, parenting dimensions and children's adjustment. Mothers from cultures endorsing higher collectivism and fathers from cultures endorsing lower individualism engage more frequently in warm parenting behaviours. Mothers and fathers with higher-than-average collectivism in their culture reported higher parent warmth and expectations for children's family obligations. Mothers with higher-than-average collectivism in their cultures more frequently reported warm parenting and fewer externalising problems in children, whereas mothers with higher-than-average individualism in their culture reported more child adjustment problems. Mothers with higher-than-average conformity values in their culture reported more father-displays of warmth and greater mother-reported expectations for children's family obligations. Fathers with higher-than-average individualism in their culture reported setting more rules and soliciting more knowledge about their children's whereabouts. Fathers who endorsed higher-than-average conformity in their culture displayed more warmth and expectations for children's family obligations and granted them more autonomy. Being connected to an interdependent, cohesive group appears to relate to parenting and children's adjustment., (© 2024 International Union of Psychological Science.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Adolescents' relationships with parents and romantic partners in eight countries.
- Author
-
Gorla L, Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adolescent, Parenting psychology, Object Attachment, Personal Satisfaction, Colombia, Thailand, Kenya, China, United States, Interpersonal Relations, Philippines, Sweden, Communication, Italy, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Introduction: Creating romantic relationships characterized by high-quality, satisfaction, few conflicts, and reasoning strategies to handle conflicts is an important developmental task for adolescents connected to the relational models they receive from their parents. This study examines how parent-adolescent conflicts, attachment, positive parenting, and communication are related to adolescents' romantic relationship quality, satisfaction, conflicts, and management., Method: We interviewed 311 adolescents at two time points (females = 52%, ages 15 and 17) in eight countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States). Generalized and linear mixed models were run considering the participants' nesting within countries., Results: Adolescents with negative conflicts with their parents reported low romantic relationship quality and satisfaction and high conflicts with their romantic partners. Adolescents experiencing an anxious attachment to their parents reported low romantic relationship quality, while adolescents with positive parenting showed high romantic relationship satisfaction. However, no association between parent-adolescent relationships and conflict management skills involving reasoning with the partner was found. No associations of parent-adolescent communication with romantic relationship dimensions emerged, nor was there any effect of the country on romantic relationship quality or satisfaction., Conclusion: These results stress the relevance of parent-adolescent conflicts and attachment as factors connected to how adolescents experience romantic relationships., (© 2024 Foundation for Professionals in Services to Adolescents.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Developmental Trajectories of Parental Self-Efficacy as Children Transition to Adolescence in Nine Countries: Latent Growth Curve Analyses.
- Author
-
Buchanan CM, Glatz T, Selçuk Ş, Skinner AT, Lansford JE, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, and Alampay LP
- Subjects
- Female, Child, Humans, Adolescent, Infant, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Parents, Mothers, Parenting, Self Efficacy
- Abstract
Little is known about the developmental trajectories of parental self-efficacy as children transition into adolescence. This study examined parental self-efficacy among mothers and fathers over 3 1/2 years representing this transition, and whether the level and developmental trajectory of parental self-efficacy varied by cultural group. Data were drawn from three waves of the Parenting Across Cultures (PAC) project, a large-scale longitudinal, cross-cultural study, and included 1178 mothers and 1041 fathers of children who averaged 9.72 years of age at T1 (51.2% girls). Parents were from nine countries (12 ethnic/cultural groups), which were categorized into those with a predominant collectivistic (i.e., China, Kenya, Philippines, Thailand, Colombia, and Jordan) or individualistic (i.e., Italy, Sweden, and USA) cultural orientation based on Hofstede's Individualism Index (Hofstede Insights, 2021). Latent growth curve analyses supported the hypothesis that parental self-efficacy would decline as children transition into adolescence only for parents from more individualistic countries; parental self-efficacy increased over the same years among parents from more collectivistic countries. Secondary exploratory analyses showed that some demographic characteristics predicted the level and trajectory of parental self-efficacy differently for parents in more individualistic and more collectivistic countries. Results suggest that declines in parental self-efficacy documented in previous research are culturally influenced., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Intraindividual variability in parental acceptance-rejection predicts externalizing and internalizing symptoms across childhood/adolescence in nine countries.
- Author
-
Folker AE, Deater-Deckard K, Lansford JE, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Rothenberg WA, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, and Chang L
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Adolescent, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
Parenting that is high in rejection and low in acceptance is associated with higher levels of internalizing (INT) and externalizing (EXT) problems in children and adolescents. These symptoms develop and can increase in severity to negatively impact adolescents' social, academic, and emotional functioning. However, there are two major gaps in the extant literature: (a) nearly all prior research has focused on between-person differences in acceptance/rejection at the expense of examining intraindividual variability (IIV) across time in acceptance/rejection; and (b) no prior studies examine IIV in acceptance/rejection in diverse international samples. The present study utilized six waves of data with 1,199 adolescents' families living in nine countries from the Parenting Across Cultures study to test the hypotheses that (1) higher amounts of youth IIV in mother acceptance/rejection predict higher internalizing and (2) externalizing symptoms, and (3) that higher youth IIV in father acceptance/rejection predict higher internalizing, and (4) externalizing symptoms. Meta-analytic techniques indicated a significant, positive effect of IIV in child-reported mother and father acceptance/rejection on adolescent externalizing symptoms, and a significant positive effect of IIV in father acceptance/rejection on internalizing symptoms. The weighted effect for mother acceptance/rejection on internalizing symptoms was not statistically significant. Additionally, there was significant heterogeneity in all meta-analytic estimates. More variability over time in experiences of parental acceptance/rejection predicts internalizing and externalizing symptoms as children transition into adolescence, and this effect is present across multiple diverse samples. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Compliance with Health Recommendations and Vaccine Hesitancy During the COVID Pandemic in Nine Countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Rothenberg WA, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Morgenstern G, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, and Uribe Tirado LM
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Ecosystem, Pandemics prevention & control, Vaccination Hesitancy, China, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Longitudinal data from the Parenting Across Cultures study of children, mothers, and fathers in 12 cultural groups in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the USA; N = 1331 families) were used to understand predictors of compliance with COVID-19 mitigation strategies and vaccine hesitancy. Confidence in government responses to the COVID pandemic was also examined as a potential moderator of links between pre-COVID risk factors and compliance with COVID mitigation strategies and vaccine hesitancy. Greater confidence in government responses to the COVID pandemic was associated with greater compliance with COVID mitigation strategies and less vaccine hesitancy across cultures and reporters. Pre-COVID financial strain and family stress were less consistent predictors of compliance with COVID mitigation strategies and vaccine hesitancy than confidence in government responses to the pandemic. Findings suggest the importance of bolstering confidence in government responses to future human ecosystem disruptions, perhaps through consistent, clear, non-partisan messaging and transparency in acknowledging limitations and admitting mistakes to inspire compliance with government and public health recommendations., (© 2022. Society for Prevention Research.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. How adolescents' lives were disrupted over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic: A longitudinal investigation in 12 cultural groups in 9 nations from March 2020 to July 2022.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Skinner AT, Lansford JE, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Abstract
It is unclear how much adolescents' lives were disrupted throughout the COVID-19 pandemic or what risk factors predicted such disruption. To answer these questions, 1,080 adolescents in 9 nations were surveyed 5 times from March 2020 to July 2022. Rates of adolescent COVID-19 life disruption were stable and high. Adolescents who, compared to their peers, lived in nations with higher national COVID-19 death rates, lived in nations with less stringent COVID-19 mitigation strategies, had less confidence in their government's response to COVID-19, complied at higher rates with COVID-19 control measures, experienced the death of someone they knew due to COVID-19, or experienced more internalizing, externalizing, and smoking problems reported more life disruption due to COVID-19 during part or all of the pandemic. Additionally, when, compared to their typical levels of functioning, adolescents experienced spikes in national death rates, experienced less stringent COVID-19 mitigation measures, experienced less confidence in government response to the COVID-19 pandemic, complied at higher rates with COVID-19 control measures, experienced more internalizing problems, or smoked more at various periods during the pandemic, they also experienced more COVID-19 life disruption. Collectively, these findings provide new insights that policymakers can use to prevent the disruption of adolescents' lives in future pandemics.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Predicting Adolescent Mental Health Outcomes Across Cultures: A Machine Learning Approach.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Bizzego A, Esposito G, Lansford JE, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, and Alampay LP
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Adolescent, Parenting psychology, Mental Health, Risk Factors, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Adolescent Behavior psychology
- Abstract
Adolescent mental health problems are rising rapidly around the world. To combat this rise, clinicians and policymakers need to know which risk factors matter most in predicting poor adolescent mental health. Theory-driven research has identified numerous risk factors that predict adolescent mental health problems but has difficulty distilling and replicating these findings. Data-driven machine learning methods can distill risk factors and replicate findings but have difficulty interpreting findings because these methods are atheoretical. This study demonstrates how data- and theory-driven methods can be integrated to identify the most important preadolescent risk factors in predicting adolescent mental health. Machine learning models examined which of 79 variables assessed at age 10 were the most important predictors of adolescent mental health at ages 13 and 17. These models were examined in a sample of 1176 families with adolescents from nine nations. Machine learning models accurately classified 78% of adolescents who were above-median in age 13 internalizing behavior, 77.3% who were above-median in age 13 externalizing behavior, 73.2% who were above-median in age 17 externalizing behavior, and 60.6% who were above-median in age 17 internalizing behavior. Age 10 measures of youth externalizing and internalizing behavior were the most important predictors of age 13 and 17 externalizing/internalizing behavior, followed by family context variables, parenting behaviors, individual child characteristics, and finally neighborhood and cultural variables. The combination of theoretical and machine-learning models strengthens both approaches and accurately predicts which adolescents demonstrate above average mental health difficulties in approximately 7 of 10 adolescents 3-7 years after the data used in machine learning models were collected., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Pre-pandemic psychological and behavioral predictors of responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in nine countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Godwin J, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, and Bornstein MH
- Subjects
- Humans, Mediation Analysis, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Male, Female, Adolescent, Young Adult, COVID-19 epidemiology, Internationality, Internal-External Control, Emotional Adjustment
- Abstract
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, adolescents ( N = 1,330; M
ages = 15 and 16; 50% female), mothers, and fathers from nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, United States) reported on adolescents' internalizing and externalizing problems, adolescents completed a lab-based task to assess tendency for risk-taking, and adolescents reported on their well-being. During the pandemic, participants ( Mage = 20) reported on changes in their internalizing, externalizing, and substance use compared to before the pandemic. Across countries, adolescents' internalizing problems pre-pandemic predicted increased internalizing during the pandemic, and poorer well-being pre-pandemic predicted increased externalizing and substance use during the pandemic. Other relations varied across countries, and some were moderated by confidence in the government's handling of the pandemic, gender, and parents' education.- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Parenting, Adolescent Sensation Seeking, and Subsequent Substance Use: Moderation by Adolescent Temperament.
- Author
-
Kapetanovic S, Zietz S, Lansford JE, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Oburu P, Junla D, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Adolescent, Male, Parenting psychology, Temperament, Sensation, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Substance-Related Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Although previous research has identified links between parenting and adolescent substance use, little is known about the role of adolescent individual processes, such as sensation seeking, and temperamental tendencies for such links. To test tenets from biopsychosocial models of adolescent risk behavior and differential susceptibility theory, this study investigated longitudinal associations among positive and harsh parenting, adolescent sensation seeking, and substance use and tested whether the indirect associations were moderated by adolescent temperament, including activation control, frustration, sadness, and positive emotions. Longitudinal data reported by adolescents (n = 892; 49.66% girls) and their mothers from eight cultural groups when adolescents were ages 12, 13, and 14 were used. A moderated mediation model showed that parenting was related to adolescent substance use, both directly and indirectly, through sensation seeking. Indirect associations were moderated by adolescent temperament. This study advances understanding of the developmental paths between the contextual and individual factors critical for adolescent substance use across a wide range of cultural contexts., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Intergenerational Transmission of Maladaptive Parenting and its Impact on Child Mental Health: Examining Cross-Cultural Mediating Pathways and Moderating Protective Factors.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, and Bornstein MH
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Child, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Mental Health, Protective Factors, Intergenerational Relations, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Cross-Cultural Comparison
- Abstract
Using a sample of 1338 families from 12 cultural groups in 9 nations, we examined whether retrospectively remembered Generation 1 (G1) parent rejecting behaviors were passed to Generation 2 (G2 parents), whether such intergenerational transmission led to higher Generation 3 (G3 child) externalizing and internalizing behavior at age 13, and whether such intergenerational transmission could be interrupted by parent participation in parenting programs or family income increases of > 5%. Utilizing structural equation modeling, we found that the intergenerational transmission of parent rejection that is linked with higher child externalizing and internalizing problems occurs across cultural contexts. However, the magnitude of transmission is greater in cultures with higher normative levels of parent rejection. Parenting program participation broke this intergenerational cycle in fathers from cultures high in normative parent rejection. Income increases appear to break this intergenerational cycle in mothers from most cultures, regardless of normative levels of parent rejection. These results tentatively suggest that bolstering protective factors such as parenting program participation, income supplementation, and (in cultures high in normative parent rejection) legislative changes and other population-wide positive parenting information campaigns aimed at changing cultural parenting norms may be effective in breaking intergenerational cycles of maladaptive parenting and improving child mental health across multiple generations., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Predicting child aggression: The role of parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression across 13 cultural groups in 9 nations.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Sorbring E, Lansford JE, Peña Alampay L, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Giunta LD, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Maria Uribe Tirado L, and Yotanyamaneewong S
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Aggression psychology, Internationality, Culture, Parents education, Parents psychology, Child Behavior psychology, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression both predict the emergence of child aggression, but they are rarely studied together and in longitudinal contexts. The present study does so by examining the unique predictive effects of parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 on child aggression at age 9 in 1456 children from 13 cultural groups in 9 nations. Multiple group structural equation models explored whether age 8 child and parent endorsement of reactive aggression predicted subsequent age 9 child endorsement of reactive aggression and child aggression, after accounting for prior child aggression and parent education. Results revealed that greater parent endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 predicted greater child endorsement of aggression at age 9, that greater parent endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 uniquely predicted greater aggression at age 9 in girls, and that greater child endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 uniquely predicted greater aggression at age 9 in boys. All three of these associations emerged across cultures. Implications of, and explanations for, study findings are discussed., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. A Longitudinal Examination of the Family Stress Model of Economic Hardship in Seven Countries.
- Author
-
Zietz S, Lansford JE, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Skinner AT, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, and Gurdal S
- Abstract
The Family Stress Model of Economic Hardship (FSM) posits that economic situations create differences in psychosocial outcomes for parents and developmental outcomes for their adolescent children. However, prior studies guided by the FSM have been mostly in high-income countries and have included only mother report or have not disaggregated mother and father report. Our focal research questions were whether the indirect effect of economic hardship on adolescent mental health was mediated by economic pressure, parental depression, dysfunctional dyadic coping, and parenting, and whether these relations differed by culture and mother versus father report. We conducted multiple group serial mediation path models using longitudinal data from adolescents ages 12-15 in 2008-2012 from 1,082 families in 10 cultural groups in seven countries (Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States). Taken together, the indirect effect findings suggest partial support for the FSM in most cultural groups across study countries. We found associations among economic hardship, parental depression, parenting, and adolescent internalizing and externalizing. Findings support polices and interventions aimed at disrupting each path in the model to mitigate the effects of economic hardship on parental depression, harsh parenting, and adolescents' externalizing and internalizing problems., Competing Interests: Declarations: The authors have no relevant financial or non-financial interests to disclose.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Positive parenting, adolescent adjustment, and quality of adolescent diet in nine countries.
- Author
-
Zietz S, Cheng E, Lansford JE, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Chang L, and Bornstein MH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Diet
- Abstract
Introduction: We sought to understand the relation between positive parenting and adolescent diet, whether adolescents' internalizing and externalizing behaviors mediate relations between positive parenting and adolescent diet, and whether the same associations hold for both boys and girls and across cultural groups., Methods: Adolescents (N = 1334) in 12 cultural groups in nine countries were followed longitudinally from age 12 to 15. We estimated two sets of multiple group structural equation models, one by gender and one by cultural group., Results: Modeling by gender, our findings suggest a direct effect of positive parenting at age 12 on a higher quality diet at age 15 for males (β = .140; 95% CI: 0.057, 0.229), but an indirect effect of positive parenting at age 12 on a higher quality diet at age 15 by decreasing externalizing behaviors at age 14 for females (β = .011; 95% CI: 0.002, 0.029). Modeling by cultural group, we found no significant direct effect of positive parenting at age 12 on the quality of adolescent diet at age 15. There was a significant negative effect of positive parenting at age 12 on internalizing (β = -.065; 95% CI: -0.119, -0.009) and externalizing at age 14 (β = -.033; 95% CI: -0.086, -0.018)., Conclusions: We founder gender differences in the relations among positive parenting, adolescents' externalizing and internalizing behaviors, and adolescent diet. Our findings indicate that quality of parenting is important not only in promoting adolescent mental health but potentially also in promoting the quality of adolescents' diet., (© 2022 The Foundation for Professionals in Services for Adolescents.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Change in Caregivers' Attitudes and Use of Corporal Punishment Following a Legal Ban: A Multi-Country Longitudinal Comparison.
- Author
-
Alampay LP, Godwin J, Lansford JE, Oburu P, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Rothenberg WA, Malone PS, Skinner AT, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, and Gurdal S
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Kenya, Longitudinal Studies, Mothers, Parenting, United States, Caregivers, Punishment
- Abstract
We examined whether a policy banning corporal punishment enacted in Kenya in 2010 is associated with changes in Kenyan caregivers' use of corporal punishment and beliefs in its effectiveness and normativeness, and compared to caregivers in six countries without bans in the same period. Using a longitudinal study with six waves of panel data (2008-2016), mothers ( N = 1086) in Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Thailand, and United States reported household use of corporal punishment and beliefs about its effectiveness and normativeness. Random intercept models and multi-group piecewise growth curve models indicated that the proportion of corporal punishment behaviors used by the Kenyan caregivers decreased post-ban at a significantly different rate compared to the caregivers in other countries in the same period. Beliefs of effectiveness of corporal punishment were declining among the caregivers in all sites, whereas the Kenyan mothers reported increasing perceptions of normativeness of corporal punishment post-ban, different from the other sites. While other contributing factors cannot be ruled out, our natural experiment suggests that corporal punishment decreased after a national ban, a shift that was not evident in sites without bans in the same period.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Adolescent Positivity and Future Orientation, Parental Psychological Control, and Young Adult Internalising Behaviours during COVID-19 in Nine Countries.
- Author
-
Skinner AT, Çiftçi L, Jones S, Klotz E, Ondrušková T, Lansford JE, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Uribe Tirado LM, and Yotanyamaneewong S
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted many young adults' lives educationally, economically, and personally. This study investigated associations between COVID-19-related disruption and perception of increases in internalising symptoms among young adults and whether these associations were moderated by earlier measures of adolescent positivity and future orientation and parental psychological control. Participants included 1329 adolescents at Time 1, and 810 of those participants as young adults ( M age = 20, 50.4% female) at Time 2 from 9 countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States). Drawing from a larger longitudinal study of adolescent risk taking and young adult competence, this study controlled for earlier levels of internalising symptoms during adolescence in examining these associations. Higher levels of adolescent positivity and future orientation as well as parent psychological control during late adolescence helped protect young adults from sharper perceived increases in anxiety and depression during the first nine months of widespread pandemic lockdowns in all nine countries. Findings are discussed in terms of how families in the 21st century can foster greater resilience during and after adolescence when faced with community-wide stressors, and the results provide new information about how psychological control may play a protective role during times of significant community-wide threats to personal health and welfare., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Effects of Parental Acceptance-Rejection on Children's Internalizing and Externalizing Behaviors: A Longitudinal, Multicultural Study.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Ali S, Rohner RP, Lansford JE, Britner PA, Giunta LD, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, and Deater-Deckard K
- Abstract
Background: Grounded in interpersonal acceptance-rejection theory, this study assessed children's (N=1,315) perceptions of maternal and paternal acceptance-rejection in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States) as predictors of children's externalizing and internalizing behaviors across ages 7-14 years., Methods: Parenting behaviors were measured using children's reports on the Parental Acceptance-Rejection Questionnaire. Child externalizing and internalizing behaviors were measured using mother, father, and child reports on the Achenbach System of Empirically-Based Assessment., Results: Using a multilevel modeling framework, we found that in cultures where both maternal and paternal indifference/neglect scores were higher than average-compared to other cultures -children's internalizing problems were more persistent. At the within-culture level, all four forms of maternal and paternal rejection (i.e., coldness/lack of affection, hostility/aggression, indifference/neglect, and undifferentiated rejection) were independently associated with both externalizing and internalizing problems across ages 7-14 even after controlling for child gender, parent education, and each of the four forms of parental rejection., Conclusions: Results demonstrate that the effects of perceived parental acceptance-rejection are panculturally similar., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest/Competing Interests The authors declare no financial or non-financial conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Culture and Social Change in Mothers' and Fathers' Individualism, Collectivism and Parenting Attitudes.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Zietz S, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, and Alampay LP
- Abstract
Cultures and families are not static over time but evolve in response to social transformations, such as changing gender roles, urbanization, globalization, and technology uptake. Historically, individualism and collectivism have been widely used heuristics guiding cross-cultural comparisons, yet these orientations may evolve over time, and individuals within cultures and cultures themselves can have both individualist and collectivist orientations. Historical shifts in parents' attitudes also have occurred within families in several cultures. As a way of understanding mothers' and fathers' individualism, collectivism, and parenting attitudes at this point in history, we examined parents in nine countries that varied widely in country-level individualism rankings. Data included mothers' and fathers' reports ( N = 1338 families) at three time points in China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States. More variance was accounted for by within-culture than between-culture factors for parents' individualism, collectivism, progressive parenting attitudes, and authoritarian parenting attitudes, which were predicted by a range of sociodemographic factors that were largely similar for mothers and fathers and across cultural groups. Social changes from the 20th to the 21st century may have contributed to some of the similarities between mothers and fathers and across the nine countries., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Cross-Cultural Associations of Four Parenting Behaviors With Child Flourishing: Examining Cultural Specificity and Commonality in Cultural Normativeness and Intergenerational Transmission Processes.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Bornstein MH, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, and Steinberg L
- Subjects
- Child, China, Female, Humans, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Philippines, United States, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Parenting
- Abstract
Families from nine countries (N = 1,338) were interviewed annually seven times (M
age child = 7-15) to test specificity and commonality in parenting behaviors associated with child flourishing and moderation of associations by normativeness of parenting. Participants included 1,338 children (M = 8.59 years, SD = 0.68, range = 7-11 years; 50% girls), their mothers (N = 1,283, M = 37.04 years, SD = 6.51, range = 19-70 years), and their fathers (N = 1,170, M = 40.19 years, SD = 6.75, range = 22-76 years) at Wave 1 of 7 annual waves collected between 2008 and 2017. Families were recruited from 12 ethnocultural groups in nine countries including: Shanghai, China (n = 123); Medellín, Colombia (n = 108); Naples (n = 102) and Rome (n = 111), Italy; Zarqa, Jordan (n = 114); Kisumu, Kenya (n = 100); Manila, Philippines (n = 120); Trollhättan & Vänersborg, Sweden (n = 129); Chiang Mai, Thailand (n = 120); and Durham, NC, United States (n = 110 White, n = 102 Black, n = 99 Latinx). Intergenerational parenting (parenting passed from Generation 1 to Generation 2) demonstrated specificity. Children from cultures with above-average G2 parent warmth experienced the most benefit from the intergenerational transmission of warmth, whereas children from cultures with below-average G2 hostility, neglect, and rejection were best protected from deleterious intergenerational effects of parenting behaviors on flourishing. Single-generation parenting (Generation 2 parenting directly associated with Generation 3 flourishing) demonstrated commonality. Parent warmth promoted, and parent hostility, neglect, and rejection impeded the development of child flourishing largely regardless of parenting norms., (© 2021 The Authors. Child Development © 2021 Society for Research in Child Development.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Longitudinal Trajectories of Four Domains of Parenting in Relation to Adolescent Age and Puberty in Nine Countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Rothenberg WA, Riley J, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, and Steinberg L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Fathers, Female, Humans, Male, Puberty, Mothers, Parenting
- Abstract
Children, mothers, and fathers in 12 ethnic and regional groups in nine countries (N = 1,338 families) were interviewed annually for 8 years (M
age child = 8-16 years) to model four domains of parenting as a function of child age, puberty, or both. Latent growth curve models revealed that for boys and girls, parents decrease their warmth, behavioral control, rules/limit-setting, and knowledge solicitation in conjunction with children's age and pubertal status as children develop from ages 8 to 16 across a range of diverse contexts, with steeper declines after age 11 or 12 in three of the four parenting domains. National, ethnic, and regional differences and similarities in the trajectories as a function of age and puberty are discussed., (© 2021 Society for Research in Child Development.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Effects of Parental Warmth and Behavioral Control on Adolescent Externalizing and Internalizing Trajectories Across Cultures.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, and Bacchini D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Protective Factors, Behavior Control, Parents
- Abstract
We investigated the effects of parental warmth and behavioral control on externalizing and internalizing symptom trajectories from ages 8 to 14 in 1,298 adolescents from 12 cultural groups. We did not find that single universal trajectories characterized adolescent externalizing and internalizing symptoms across cultures, but instead found significant heterogeneity in starting points and rates of change in both externalizing and internalizing symptoms across cultures. Some similarities did emerge. Across many cultural groups, internalizing symptoms decreased from ages 8 to 10, and externalizing symptoms increased from ages 10 to 14. Parental warmth appears to function similarly in many cultures as a protective factor that prevents the onset and growth of adolescent externalizing and internalizing symptoms, whereas the effects of behavioral control vary from culture to culture., (© 2020 Society for Research on Adolescence.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Examining effects of mother and father warmth and control on child externalizing and internalizing problems from age 8 to 13 in nine countries.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, and Yotanyamaneewong S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, China, Colombia, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Humans, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, United States, Fathers, Mothers
- Abstract
This study used data from 12 cultural groups in 9 countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and United States; N = 1,315) to investigate bidirectional associations between parental warmth and control, and child externalizing and internalizing behaviors. In addition, the extent to which these associations held across mothers and fathers and across cultures with differing normative levels of parent warmth and control were examined. Mothers, fathers, and children completed measures when children were ages 8 to 13. Multiple-group autoregressive cross-lagged structural equation models revealed that evocative child-driven effects of externalizing and internalizing behavior on warmth and control are ubiquitous across development, cultures, mothers, and fathers. Results also reveal that parenting effects on child externalizing and internalizing behaviors, though rarer than child effects, extend into adolescence when examined separately in mothers and fathers. Father-based parent effects were more frequent than mother effects. Most parent- and child-driven effects appear to emerge consistently across cultures. The rare culture-specific parenting effects suggested that occasionally the effects of parenting behaviors that run counter to cultural norms may be delayed in rendering their protective effect against deleterious child outcomes.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Opportunities and peer support for aggression and delinquency during adolescence in nine countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Zietz S, Bornstein MH, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, and Chang L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, China ethnology, Colombia ethnology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Humans, Italy ethnology, Jordan ethnology, Kenya ethnology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Philippines ethnology, Sweden ethnology, Thailand ethnology, United States ethnology, Adolescent Behavior ethnology, Adolescent Development, Aggression, Juvenile Delinquency ethnology, Peer Group, Social Support
- Abstract
This study tested culture-general and culture-specific aspects of adolescent developmental processes by focusing on opportunities and peer support for aggressive and delinquent behavior, which could help account for cultural similarities and differences in problem behavior during adolescence. Adolescents from 12 cultural groups in 9 countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States) provided data at ages 12, 14, and 15. Variance in opportunities and peer support for aggression and delinquency, as well as aggressive and delinquent behavior, was greater within than between cultures. Across cultural groups, opportunities and peer support for aggression and delinquency increased from early to mid-adolescence. Consistently across diverse cultural groups, opportunities and peer support for aggression and delinquency predicted subsequent aggressive and delinquent behavior, even after controlling for prior aggressive and delinquent behavior. The findings illustrate ways that international collaborative research can contribute to developmental science by embedding the study of development within cultural contexts., (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Cross-cultural effects of parent warmth and control on aggression and rule-breaking from ages 8 to 13.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, China ethnology, Colombia ethnology, Female, Humans, Italy ethnology, Jordan ethnology, Kenya ethnology, Male, Parenting psychology, Philippines ethnology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sweden ethnology, Thailand ethnology, United States ethnology, Aggression, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Parent-Child Relations ethnology, Parenting ethnology, Parents psychology
- Abstract
We investigated whether bidirectional associations between parental warmth and behavioral control and child aggression and rule-breaking behavior emerged in 12 cultural groups. Study participants included 1,298 children (M = 8.29 years, standard deviation [SD] = 0.66, 51% girls) from Shanghai, China (n = 121); Medellín, Colombia (n = 108); Naples (n = 100) and Rome (n = 103), Italy; Zarqa, Jordan (n = 114); Kisumu, Kenya (n = 100); Manila, Philippines (n = 120); Trollhättan/Vänersborg, Sweden (n = 101); Chiang Mai, Thailand (n = 120); and Durham, NC, United States (n = 111 White, n = 103 Black, n = 97 Latino) followed over 5 years (i.e., ages 8-13). Warmth and control were measured using the Parental Acceptance-Rejection/Control Questionnaire, child aggression and rule-breaking were measured using the Achenbach System of Empirically-Based Assessment. Multiple-group structural equation modeling was conducted. Associations between parent warmth and subsequent rule-breaking behavior were found to be more common across ontogeny and demonstrate greater variability across different cultures than associations between warmth and subsequent aggressive behavior. In contrast, the evocative effects of child aggressive behavior on subsequent parent warmth and behavioral control were more common, especially before age 10, than those of rule-breaking behavior. Considering the type of externalizing behavior, developmental time point, and cultural context is essential to understanding how parenting and child behavior reciprocally affect one another., (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Cross-Cultural Examination of Links between Parent-Adolescent Communication and Adolescent Psychological Problems in 12 Cultural Groups.
- Author
-
Kapetanovic S, Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Peña Alampay L, Al-Hassan SM, and Bacchini D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, China, Colombia, Communication, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Humans, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Male, Parents psychology, Philippines, Social Adjustment, Sweden, Thailand, United States, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Defense Mechanisms, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Psychology, Adolescent
- Abstract
Internalizing and externalizing problems increase during adolescence. However, these problems may be mitigated by adequate parenting, including effective parent-adolescent communication. The ways in which parent-driven (i.e., parent behavior control and solicitation) and adolescent-driven (i.e., disclosure and secrecy) communication efforts are linked to adolescent psychological problems universally and cross-culturally is a question that needs more empirical investigation. The current study used a sample of 1087 adolescents (M = 13.19 years, SD = 0.90, 50% girls) from 12 cultural groups in nine countries including China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States to test the cultural moderation of links between parent solicitation, parent behavior control, adolescent disclosure, and adolescent secrecy with adolescent internalizing and externalizing problems. The results indicate that adolescent-driven communication, and secrecy in particular, is intertwined with adolescents' externalizing problems across all cultures, and intertwined with internalizing problems in specific cultural contexts. Moreover, parent-driven communication efforts were predicted by adolescent disclosure in all cultures. Overall, the findings suggest that adolescent-driven communication efforts, and adolescent secrecy in particular, are important predictors of adolescent psychological problems as well as facilitators of parent-adolescent communication.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Examining effects of parent warmth and control on internalizing behavior clusters from age 8 to 12 in 12 cultural groups in nine countries.
- Author
-
Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Maria Uribe Tirado L, Yotanyamaneewong S, and Peña Alampay L
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Child Behavior, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Internal-External Control, Internationality, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Background: Studies of U.S. and European samples demonstrate that parental warmth and behavioral control predict child internalizing behaviors and vice versa. However, these patterns have not been researched in other cultures. This study investigates associations between parent warmth and control and three child-reported internalizing behavior clusters to examine this question., Methods: Data from 12 cultural groups in 9 countries were used to investigate prospective bidirectional associations between parental warmth and control, and three child-reported internalizing behavior types: withdrawn/depressed, anxious/depressed, and somatic problems. Multiple-group structural equation modeling was used to analyze associations in children followed from ages 8 to 12., Results: Parent warmth and control effects were most pervasive on child-reported withdrawn/depressed problems, somewhat pervasive on anxious/depressed problems and least pervasive on somatic problems. Additionally, parental warmth, as opposed to control, was more consistently associated with child-reported internalizing problems across behavior clusters. Child internalizing behavior effects on parental warmth and control appeared ubiquitously across cultures, and behaviors, but were limited to ages 8-10. Most effects were pancultural, but culture-specific effects emerged at ages 9-10 involving the associations between parent warmth and withdrawn/depressed and somatic behaviors., Conclusions: Effects of parent warmth and control appear stronger on some types of child-reported internalizing behaviors. Associations are especially strong with regard to parental warmth across cultures, and culture-specific effects may be accounted for by cultural normativeness of parent warmth and child-reported somatic symptoms. Child internalizing behavior effects on subsequent parenting are common across cultures., (© 2019 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Examining the internalizing pathway to substance use frequency in 10 cultural groups.
- Author
-
Andrew Rothenberg W, Lansford JE, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Maria Uribe Tirado L, Yotanyamaneewong S, Peña Alampay L, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, and Bornstein MH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Black or African American, Child, China, Colombia, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Italy, Kenya, Male, Parents, Philippines, Problem Behavior psychology, Self Report, Social Skills, Substance-Related Disorders ethnology, Thailand, Tobacco Use ethnology, Underage Drinking ethnology, United States, White People, Depression psychology, Inhibition, Psychological, Peer Influence, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Tobacco Use psychology, Underage Drinking psychology
- Abstract
Use of alcohol, tobacco, and drugs (i.e., substance use) is a leading cause of global health burden for 10-to-24-year-olds, according to the World Health Organization's index of number of years of life lost, leading international health organizations to prioritize the prevention of substance use before it escalates in adolescence. Pathways defined by childhood externalizing symptoms and internalizing symptoms identify precursors to frequent substance use toward which interventions can be directed. However, these pathways are rarely examined beyond the United States and Europe. We investigated these pathways in our sample of 1083 children from 10 cultural groups followed from ages 8-14. We found that age-10 externalizing symptoms predicted more frequent mother-reported age-13 and self-reported age-14 substance use. We also found that a depressive pathway, marked by behavioral inhibition at age 8 and subsequent elevation in depressive symptoms across ages 8-12 predicted more frequent substance use at age 13 and 14. Additionally, we found a combined externalizing and internalizing pathway, wherein elevated age-9 depressive symptoms predicted elevated externalizing symptoms at age-10 which predicted greater peer support for use at age-12, which led to more frequent substance use at age-13 and -14. These pathways remained significant within the cultural groups we studied, even after controlling for differences in substance use frequency across groups. Additionally, cultures with greater opportunities for substance use at age-12 had more frequent adolescent substance use at age-13. These findings highlight the importance of disaggregating between- and within-culture effects in identifying the etiology of early adolescent substance use., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Longitudinal associations between mothers' and fathers' anger/irritability expressiveness, harsh parenting, and adolescents' socioemotional functioning in nine countries.
- Author
-
Di Giunta L, Rothenberg WA, Lunetti C, Lansford JE, Pastorelli C, Eisenberg N, Thartori E, Basili E, Favini A, Yotanyamaneewong S, Peña Alampay L, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Dodge KA, Oburu P, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, and Uribe Tirado LM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Adolescent Behavior ethnology, Anger, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Irritable Mood, Parent-Child Relations ethnology, Parenting ethnology, Parents, Problem Behavior
- Abstract
The present study examines parents' self-efficacy about anger regulation and irritability as predictors of harsh parenting and adolescent children's irritability (i.e., mediators), which in turn were examined as predictors of adolescents' externalizing and internalizing problems. Mothers, fathers, and adolescents (N = 1,298 families) from 12 cultural groups in 9 countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and United States) were interviewed when children were about 13 years old and again 1 and 2 years later. Models were examined separately for mothers and fathers. Overall, cross-cultural similarities emerged in the associations of both mothers' and fathers' irritability, as well as of mothers' self-efficacy about anger regulation, with subsequent maternal harsh parenting and adolescent irritability, and in the associations of the latter variables with adolescents' internalizing and externalizing problems. The findings suggest that processes linking mothers' and fathers' emotion socialization and emotionality in diverse cultures to adolescent problem behaviors are somewhat similar. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Associations Between Perceived Material Deprivation, Parents' Discipline Practices, and Children's Behavior Problems: An International Perspective.
- Author
-
Schenck-Fontaine A, Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Malone PS, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, and Chang L
- Subjects
- Child, China ethnology, Colombia ethnology, Female, Humans, Italy ethnology, Jordan ethnology, Kenya ethnology, Male, Philippines ethnology, Thailand ethnology, United States ethnology, Child Behavior ethnology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Economic Status, Parenting ethnology, Problem Behavior
- Abstract
This study investigated the association between perceived material deprivation, children's behavior problems, and parents' disciplinary practices. The sample included 1,418 8- to 12-year-old children and their parents in China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States. Multilevel mixed- and fixed-effects regression models found that, even when income remained stable, perceived material deprivation was associated with children's externalizing behavior problems and parents' psychological aggression. Parents' disciplinary practices mediated a small share of the association between perceived material deprivation and children's behavior problems. There were no differences in these associations between mothers and fathers or between high- and low- and middle-income countries. These results suggest that material deprivation likely influences children's outcomes at any income level., (© 2018 Society for Research in Child Development.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. External environment and internal state in relation to life-history behavioural profiles of adolescents in nine countries.
- Author
-
Chang L, Lu HJ, Lansford JE, Bornstein MH, Steinberg L, Chen BB, Skinner AT, Dodge KA, Deater-Deckard K, Bacchini D, Pastorelli C, Alampay LP, Tapanya S, Sorbring E, Oburu P, Al-Hassan SM, Di Giunta L, Malone PS, Uribe Tirado LM, and Yotanyamaneewong S
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Age Factors, Behavior, Animal, Environment, Life History Traits
- Abstract
The external environment has traditionally been considered as the primary driver of animal life history (LH). Recent research suggests that animals' internal state is also involved, especially in forming LH behavioural phenotypes. The present study investigated how these two factors interact in formulating LH in humans. Based on a longitudinal sample of 1223 adolescents in nine countries, the results show that harsh and unpredictable environments and adverse internal states in childhood are each uniquely associated with fast LH behavioural profiles consisting of aggression, impulsivity, and risk-taking in adolescence. The external environment and internal state each strengthened the LH association of the other, but overall the external environment was more predictive of LH than was the internal state. These findings suggest that individuals rely on a multitude and consistency of sensory information in more decisively calibrating LH and behavioural strategies.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Chaos, danger, and maternal parenting in families: Links with adolescent adjustment in low- and middle-income countries.
- Author
-
Deater-Deckard K, Godwin J, Lansford JE, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, and Tapanya S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, China, Developing Countries, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Poverty psychology, Residence Characteristics, Academic Performance statistics & numerical data, Child Behavior psychology, Maternal Behavior psychology, Mother-Child Relations psychology, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
The current longitudinal study is the first comparative investigation across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) to test the hypothesis that harsher and less affectionate maternal parenting (child age 14 years, on average) statistically mediates the prediction from prior household chaos and neighborhood danger (at 13 years) to subsequent adolescent maladjustment (externalizing, internalizing, and school performance problems at 15 years). The sample included 511 urban families in six LMICs: China, Colombia, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, and Thailand. Multigroup structural equation modeling showed consistent associations between chaos, danger, affectionate and harsh parenting, and adolescent adjustment problems. There was some support for the hypothesis, with nearly all countries showing a modest indirect effect of maternal hostility (but not affection) for adolescent externalizing, internalizing, and scholastic problems. Results provide further evidence that chaotic home and dangerous neighborhood environments increase risk for adolescent maladjustment in LMIC contexts, via harsher maternal parenting., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Environmental harshness and unpredictability, life history, and social and academic behavior of adolescents in nine countries.
- Author
-
Chang L, Lu HJ, Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Bornstein MH, Steinberg L, Dodge KA, Chen BB, Tian Q, Bacchini D, Deater-Deckard K, Pastorelli C, Alampay LP, Sorbring E, Al-Hassan SM, Oburu P, Malone PS, Di Giunta L, Tirado LMU, and Tapanya S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Parents psychology, Residence Characteristics, Safety, Academic Performance, Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Geography, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Safety is essential for life. To survive, humans and other animals have developed sets of psychological and physiological adaptations known as life history (LH) tradeoff strategies in response to various safety constraints. Evolutionarily selected LH strategies in turn regulate development and behavior to optimize survival under prevailing safety conditions. The present study tested LH hypotheses concerning safety based on a 6-year longitudinal sample of 1,245 adolescents and their parents from 9 countries. The results revealed that, invariant across countries, environmental harshness, and unpredictability (lack of safety) was negatively associated with slow LH behavioral profile, measured 2 years later, and slow LH behavioral profile was negatively and positively associated with externalizing behavior and academic performance, respectively, as measured an additional 2 years later. These results support the evolutionary conception that human development responds to environmental safety cues through LH regulation of social and learning behaviors. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Correction to: Age Patterns in Risk Taking Across the World.
- Author
-
Duell N, Steinberg L, Icenogle G, Chein J, Chaudhary N, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Fanti KA, Lansford JE, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Takash HMS, Bacchini D, and Chang L
- Abstract
In the original publication, the legends for Figs 4 and 5 were incorrect, such that each regression line was mislabeled with the incorrect country. Below are the correctly labeled countries. The authors apologize for any confusion or misinformation this error may have caused.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Adolescents' cognitive capacity reaches adult levels prior to their psychosocial maturity: Evidence for a "maturity gap" in a multinational, cross-sectional sample.
- Author
-
Icenogle G, Steinberg L, Duell N, Chein J, Chang L, Chaudhary N, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Fanti KA, Lansford JE, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Takash HMS, and Bacchini D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Child, China, Colombia, Cross-Sectional Studies, Cyprus, Decision Making, Female, Humans, India, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Minors legislation & jurisprudence, Philippines, Psychology, Adolescent, Regression Analysis, Supreme Court Decisions, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sweden, Thailand, United States, Young Adult, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Adolescent Development physiology, Cognition physiology, Minors psychology
- Abstract
All countries distinguish between minors and adults for various legal purposes. Recent U.S. Supreme Court cases concerning the legal status of juveniles have consulted psychological science to decide where to draw these boundaries. However, little is known about the robustness of the relevant research, because it has been conducted largely in the U.S. and other Western countries. To the extent that lawmakers look to research to guide their decisions, it is important to know how generalizable the scientific conclusions are. The present study examines 2 psychological phenomena relevant to legal questions about adolescent maturity: cognitive capacity, which undergirds logical thinking, and psychosocial maturity, which comprises individuals' ability to restrain themselves in the face of emotional, exciting, or risky stimuli. Age patterns of these constructs were assessed in 5,227 individuals (50.7% female), ages 10-30 (M = 17.05, SD = 5.91) from 11 countries. Importantly, whereas cognitive capacity reached adult levels around age 16, psychosocial maturity reached adult levels beyond age 18, creating a "maturity gap" between cognitive and psychosocial development. Juveniles may be capable of deliberative decision making by age 16, but even young adults may demonstrate "immature" decision making in arousing situations. We argue it is therefore reasonable to have different age boundaries for different legal purposes: 1 for matters in which cognitive capacity predominates, and a later 1 for matters in which psychosocial maturity plays a substantial role. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Household Income Predicts Trajectories of Child Internalizing and Externalizing Behavior in High-, Middle-, and Low-Income Countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Malone PS, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Zelli A, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, and Steinberg L
- Abstract
This study examined longitudinal links between household income and parents' education and children's trajectories of internalizing and externalizing behaviors from age 8 to 10 reported by mothers, fathers, and children. Longitudinal data from 1,190 families in 11 cultural groups in eight countries (Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and United States) were included. Multigroup structural equation models revealed that household income, but not maternal or paternal education, was related to trajectories of mother-, father-, and child-reported internalizing and externalizing problems in each of the 11 cultural groups. Our findings highlight that in low-, middle-, and high-income countries, socioeconomic risk is related to children's internalizing and externalizing problems, extending the international focus beyond children's physical health to their emotional and behavioral development.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Knowledge and Attitude Regarding Toxoplasmosis among Jazan University Female Students.
- Author
-
Mahfouz MS, Elmahdy M, Bahri A, Mobarki YM, Altalhi AA, Barkat NA, Al-Essa HA, Ageely AH, Faqeeh NA, Areeshi NA, and Al-Hassan SM
- Abstract
Background: In Saudi Arabia, the prevalence of toxoplasmosis is high. However, to date, few studies have evaluated the degree of knowledge on toxoplasmosis among females in Saudi Arabia., Objectives: The objective of this study was to assess the knowledge, attitude and preventive behavior regarding toxoplasmosis among female students at Jazan University, Jazan, southwest Saudi Arabia., Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted on a random sample of 440 female students at Jazan University using a semi-structured, self-administered questionnaire. Data with numerical/qualitative variables were expressed as frequency and percentage. Chi-square test was used to analyze categorical variables. P < 0.05 was used to indicate statistical significance., Results: This study found that more than three-quarters (79.1%) of the students had insufficient knowledge about toxoplasmosis. Students from healthcare faculties had higher knowledge scores (28.5%) than students from arts and humanities (20.6%) and science (18.9%) faculties; however, the differences were not statistically significant ( P = 0.77). The majority of the studied sample (92.3%) was found to eat fast food on a regular basis. About 42%, 54% and 4% of the respondents reported that they never, occasionally and always ate improperly washed vegetables, respectively., Conclusions: This study found that a substantial proportion of Jazan University's female students have insufficient knowledge on toxoplasmosis. Health educational programs are necessary to increase the awareness and knowledge about toxoplasmosis and its clinical manifestations., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Parenting, culture, and the development of externalizing behaviors from age 7 to 14 in nine countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Godwin J, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, and Bacchini D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, China ethnology, Colombia ethnology, Female, Humans, Italy ethnology, Jordan ethnology, Kenya ethnology, Male, Philippines ethnology, Sweden ethnology, Thailand ethnology, United States ethnology, Adolescent Behavior ethnology, Aggression, Child Behavior ethnology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Fathers, Mothers, Parenting ethnology, Problem Behavior
- Abstract
Using multilevel models, we examined mother-, father-, and child-reported (N = 1,336 families) externalizing behavior problem trajectories from age 7 to 14 in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States). The intercept and slope of children's externalizing behavior trajectories varied both across individuals within culture and across cultures, and the variance was larger at the individual level than at the culture level. Mothers' and children's endorsement of aggression as well as mothers' authoritarian attitudes predicted higher age 8 intercepts of child externalizing behaviors. Furthermore, prediction from individual-level endorsement of aggression and authoritarian attitudes to more child externalizing behaviors was augmented by prediction from cultural-level endorsement of aggression and authoritarian attitudes, respectively. Cultures in which father-reported endorsement of aggression was higher and both mother- and father-reported authoritarian attitudes were higher also reported more child externalizing behavior problems at age 8. Among fathers, greater attributions regarding uncontrollable success in caregiving situations were associated with steeper declines in externalizing over time. Understanding cultural-level as well as individual-level correlates of children's externalizing behavior offers potential insights into prevention and intervention efforts that can be more effectively targeted at individual children and parents as well as targeted at changing cultural norms that increase the risk of children's and adolescents' externalizing behavior.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Parental acceptance-rejection and child prosocial behavior: Developmental transactions across the transition to adolescence in nine countries, mothers and fathers, and girls and boys.
- Author
-
Putnick DL, Bornstein MH, Lansford JE, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Zelli A, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, and Bombi AS
- Subjects
- Child, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Humans, Internationality, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Psychology, Child, Sex Factors, Child Behavior psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Promoting children's prosocial behavior is a goal for parents, healthcare professionals, and nations. Does positive parenting promote later child prosocial behavior, or do children who are more prosocial elicit more positive parenting later, or both? Relations between parenting and prosocial behavior have to date been studied only in a narrow band of countries, mostly with mothers and not fathers, and child gender has infrequently been explored as a moderator of parenting-prosocial relations. This cross-national study uses 1,178 families (mothers, fathers, and children) from 9 countries to explore developmental transactions between parental acceptance-rejection and girls' and boys' prosocial behavior across 3 waves (child ages 9 to 12). Controlling for stability across waves, within-wave relations, and parental age and education, higher parental acceptance predicted increased child prosocial behavior from age 9 to 10 and from age 10 to 12. Higher age 9 child prosocial behavior also predicted increased parental acceptance from age 9 to 10. These transactional paths were invariant across 9 countries, mothers and fathers, and girls and boys. Parental acceptance increases child prosocial behaviors later, but child prosocial behaviors are not effective at increasing parental acceptance in the transition to adolescence. This study identifies widely applicable socialization processes across countries, mothers and fathers, and girls and boys. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Bidirectional Relations Between Parenting and Behavior Problems From Age 8 to 13 in Nine Countries.
- Author
-
Lansford JE, Rothenberg WA, Jensen TM, Lippold MA, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, China, Colombia, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Humans, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Male, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, United States, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Child Behavior psychology, Parenting psychology, Problem Behavior psychology
- Abstract
This study used data from 12 cultural groups in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States; N = 1,298) to understand the cross-cultural generalizability of how parental warmth and control are bidirectionally related to externalizing and internalizing behaviors from childhood to early adolescence. Mothers, fathers, and children completed measures when children were ages 8-13. Multiple-group autoregressive, cross-lagged structural equation models revealed that child effects rather than parent effects may better characterize how warmth and control are related to child externalizing and internalizing behaviors over time, and that parent effects may be more characteristic of relations between parental warmth and control and child externalizing and internalizing behavior during childhood than early adolescence., (© 2018 Society for Research on Adolescence.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Age Patterns in Risk Taking Across the World.
- Author
-
Duell N, Steinberg L, Icenogle G, Chein J, Chaudhary N, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Fanti KA, Lansford JE, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Takash HMS, Bacchini D, and Chang L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Global Health, Humans, Male, Self Report, Young Adult, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Risk-Taking
- Abstract
Epidemiological data indicate that risk behaviors are among the leading causes of adolescent morbidity and mortality worldwide. Consistent with this, laboratory-based studies of age differences in risk behavior allude to a peak in adolescence, suggesting that adolescents demonstrate a heightened propensity, or inherent inclination, to take risks. Unlike epidemiological reports, studies of risk taking propensity have been limited to Western samples, leaving questions about the extent to which heightened risk taking propensity is an inherent or culturally constructed aspect of adolescence. In the present study, age patterns in risk-taking propensity (using two laboratory tasks: the Stoplight and the BART) and real-world risk taking (using self-reports of health and antisocial risk taking) were examined in a sample of 5227 individuals (50.7% female) ages 10-30 (M = 17.05 years, SD = 5.91) from 11 Western and non-Western countries (China, Colombia, Cyprus, India, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the US). Two hypotheses were tested: (1) risk taking follows an inverted-U pattern across age groups, peaking earlier on measures of risk taking propensity than on measures of real-world risk taking, and (2) age patterns in risk taking propensity are more consistent across countries than age patterns in real-world risk taking. Overall, risk taking followed the hypothesized inverted-U pattern across age groups, with health risk taking evincing the latest peak. Age patterns in risk taking propensity were more consistent across countries than age patterns in real-world risk taking. Results suggest that although the association between age and risk taking is sensitive to measurement and culture, around the world, risk taking is generally highest among late adolescents.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.