Do Mothers or Children Lead the Dance? Disentangling Individual and Influence Effects During Conflict
Adult
Male
Adolescent
Parenting
Negotiating
05 social sciences
Mothers
Mother-Child Relations
Conflict, Psychological
Child, Preschool
Humans
Female
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Child
Maternal Behavior
DOI:
10.1111/cdev.13447
Publication Date:
2020-08-28T13:50:30Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Are mother–child conflict discussions shaped by time‐varying, reciprocal influences, even after accounting for stable contributions from each individual? Mothers were filmed discussing a conflict for 5 min, separately with their younger (ages 5–9, N = 217) and older (ages 7–13, N = 220) children. Each person’s conflict constructiveness was coded in 20‐s intervals and data were analyzed using dynamic structural equation modeling, which separates individual and influence effects. Children influenced their mothers’ behavior under certain conditions, with evidence for developmental differences in the magnitude and direction of influence, whereas mothers did not influence their children under any circumstance. Results are discussed in the context of child effects on parent behavior and changes in parenting across middle childhood.
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