Title of article :
Children’s Intent Attributions and Feelings of Distress:
Associations with Maternal and Paternal Parenting Practices
Author/Authors :
David A. Nelson، نويسنده , , Sarah M. Coyne، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Many studies point to the importance of social
information processing mechanisms in understanding distinct
child behaviors such as aggression. However, few studies
have assessed whether parenting might be related to such
mechanisms. This study considers how aversive forms of
parenting (i.e., corporal punishment, psychological control) as
well as parental warmth and responsiveness might be
concurrently associated with children’s hostile intent attributions
and emotional distress in response to ambiguous
provocation scenarios (both instrumental and relational). A
sample of 219 children (101 boys, 118 girls) and their parents
participated. Bivariate associations showed that parenting
dimensions and child variables were significantly associated
in mostly expected ways, but only in father–child relationships
(especially father–son relationships). Analyses generally
showed dimensions of aversive parenting by fathers to be
associated with a greater tendency toward hostile attributional
bias in children. Moreover, paternal warmth and responsiveness,
as well as corporal punishment, were associated with
less emotional distress in boys. In contrast, paternal psychological
control predicted greater emotional distress in boys.
The findings suggest that the tone of the father–son
relationship, in particular, may help set the tone for how boys
interpret their social world. Psychological control figures
prominently in this regard.
Keywords :
Intent attributions . Parenting .Emotional distress . Psychological control
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology