Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
359754 Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Parental psychological control generally consists of overinvolved/protective and critical/rejecting elements, both being linked to children's psychosocial maladjustment. The critical/rejecting element is multidimensional in nature, and few studies have explored this conceptual fullness. It is possible that some dimensions, if they can be statistically differentiated, are uniquely tied to various child behaviors. This may help resolve some of the inconsistency apparent across studies, such as studies of relational aggression. Accordingly, we examined the association between parental psychological control and childhood physical and relational aggression using a dimensional approach. Participants were 204 Russian preschoolers and their parents. The results revealed that dimensions of psychosocial control (i.e., shaming/disappointment, constraining verbal expressions, invalidating feelings, love withdrawal, and guilt induction) could be statistically differentiated, even though most dimensions tended to be significantly correlated. Furthermore, all dimensions, except for invalidating feelings, were significantly associated with childhood aggression, but predominantly in same-gender parent–child dyads.

► We investigated dimensions of parental psychological control and child aggression. ► The dimensions of psychological control were statistically differentiated via CFA. ► Only the invalidating feelings dimension failed to predict child aggression. ► Findings were predominantly found in opposite-sex parent–child dyads.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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