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Qing Zeng; Zhiling Yang; Tong Xiao; Huijun Luo; Ping Chen – School Psychology International, 2025
Depression is the second most common mental disorder among adolescents worldwide. From the perspectives of emotional security theory and interpersonal acceptance-rejection theory, parental rearing behaviors impact adolescents' depressive symptoms. The current study aims to uncover the underlying relationship mechanisms between different parental…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Child Rearing, Parent Influence, Adolescents
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Jinliang Guan; Baojuan Liu; Wangyan Ma; Chengzhen Liu – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
Suicidal ideation is a prominent public health problem among junior middle school students. Previous researchers have explored the influence of parenting style on adolescents' suicidal ideation, but few researchers distinguished the influence of positive and negative parenting styles. The mediating effect of negative emotions between negative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Middle School Students, Suicide, Parenting Styles
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Laura M. Padilla-Walker; Meg O. Jankovich; Adam A. Rogers – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2024
This study used a person-centred approach to consider profiles of parent-child sex communication. We sought to determine whether profiles of sex communication were distinguishable from one another based on aspects of both the parent and the child. Participants included 596 US young people (51% female at birth; Mage = 14.55, SD = 1.70, 56% white),…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Interpersonal Communication, Sexuality, Parenting Styles
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Peggy A. Kong; Xinwei Zhang; Xiaoran Yu; Damian Wyman – Chinese Education & Society, 2024
In China, parents, teachers, and society generally oppose adolescent romance, believing it impedes youth from academic success. However, research that investigates factors influencing one's involvement in adolescent romance is scarce, especially among rural Chinese youth. Drawing upon 1,262 youth and their mothers in rural Gansu province, China,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intimacy, Gender Differences, Parenting Styles
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Waxun Su; Tak Kwan Lam; Zhennan Yi; Nigela Ahemaitijiang; Zhuo Rachel Han; Qiandong Wang – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2024
Affect-biased attention is an important predictive factor of children's early socio-emotional development, possibly shaped by the family environment. Our study aimed to reveal children's temporal dynamic patterns of affect-biased attention by looking at time series of attention to emotional faces, individual differences in temporal dynamics, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Affective Behavior, Bias
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Morgan J. Thompson; J. Benjamin Hinnant; Stephen A. Erath; Mona El-Sheikh – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Guided by developmental models examining the legacy of childhood caregiving environments, we examined the longitudinal pattern of associations between harsh parenting and children's internalizing and externalizing symptoms across late childhood to late adolescence. Participants included 199 youth (48.7% female, 65.3% White, 32.2% Black, 2.5%…
Descriptors: Preadolescents, Adolescents, Youth, Longitudinal Studies
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Walters, Glenn D. – Youth & Society, 2024
The goal of this study was to determine the significance of variable order when it comes to using child and parent reports of parental support to predict delinquency. It was hypothesized that a social context variable (parental support as rated by the parent) would precede a perceptual variable (perceived parental support competence as rated by…
Descriptors: Predictor Variables, Delinquency, Parent Child Relationship, Parenting Styles
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Y.T. Deng; Y. Luo – Educational Psychology, 2024
This longitudinal study explored whether there are differences between the associations of perceived paternal and maternal emotional warmth to Chinese adolescents' academic burnout. It also investigated whether emotional stability mediates the potential association of perceived parental emotional warmth and academic burnout. Four scales were used…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parenting Styles, Parent Child Relationship, Affective Behavior
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Rachael W. Cheung; Chloe Austerberry; Pasco Fearon; Marianna E. Hayiou-Thomas; Leslie D. Leve; Daniel S. Shaw; Jody M. Ganiban; Misaki N. Natsuaki; Jenae M. Neiderhieser; David Reiss – Child Development, 2024
Parenting and children's temperament are important influences on language development. However, temperament may reflect prior parenting, and parenting effects may reflect genes common to parents and children. In 561 U.S. adoptees (57% male) and their birth and rearing parents (70% and 92% White, 13% and 4% African American, and 7% and 2% Latinx,…
Descriptors: Genetics, Nature Nurture Controversy, Child Development, Language Acquisition
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Annika Rademacher; Jelena Zumbach; Ute Koglin – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Parenting styles act as a risk or a protective factor for the development of aggressive behavior problems in children. Moreover, children with deficits in emotion regulation often show increased aggressive behaviors. Previous studies confirm that parenting style also contributes to the development of emotion dysregulation. The present longitudinal…
Descriptors: Parenting Styles, Child Development, Child Behavior, Emotional Response
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Allison Frost; Elissa Scherer; Esther O. Chung; John A. Gallis; Kate Sanborn; Yunji Zhou; Ashley Hagaman; Katherine LeMasters; Siham Sikander; Elizabeth Turner; Joanna Maselko – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2025
Maternal depression is a global public health concern with far-reaching impacts on child development, yet our understanding of mechanisms remains incomplete. This study examined whether parenting mediates the association between maternal depression and child outcomes. Participants included 841 rural Pakistani mother-child dyads (50% female).…
Descriptors: Mothers, Depression (Psychology), Parenting Styles, Child Development
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Jin Sun; Xiaohui Xu; Kerry Lee; So Sum Chow; Yushu Wang; Li Zhang – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
The development of self-regulation is influenced by children's experiences at home, with parenting styles and parenting stress being important contextual factors. However, little is known about how parenting styles and stress are related to the emotional (hot) and cognitive (cool) aspects of self-regulation. This study examined the relationships…
Descriptors: Parenting Styles, Stress Variables, Stress Management, Parent Child Relationship
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Albert Y. H. Lo; Su Yeong Kim; Harold D. Grotevant – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Parents' socialization beliefs have implications for the psychological adjustment of their children through their parenting behaviors; however, such pathways have rarely been established among Chinese American families. The present study examined how Chinese American parents' goals for their children to take on bicultural values and behaviors…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Socialization, Chinese Americans, Parenting Styles
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Jin Kim; Hae Min Yu – Early Education and Development, 2024
Research Findings: Immigrant families who represent a growing share of the early schooling population face unique challenges related to involvement in their children's education. This study examined whether and to what extent home-based parent involvement and parental warmth are associated with the socio-emotional and academic outcomes of children…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Parent Child Relationship, Affective Behavior, Child Development