Adolescent and Parental Contributions to Parent-Adolescent Hostility Across Early Adolescence

Journal of Youth and Adolescence
Bridget B Weymouth, Cheryl Buehler

Abstract

Early adolescence is characterized by increases in parent-adolescent hostility, yet little is known about what predicts these changes. Utilizing a fairly large sample (N = 416, 51 % girls, 91 % European American), this study examined the conjoint and unique influences of adolescent social anxiety symptoms and parental intrusiveness on changes in parent-adolescent hostility across early adolescence. Higher mother and father intrusiveness were associated with increased mother- and father-adolescent hostility. An examination of reciprocal effects revealed that mother- and father-adolescent hostility predicted increased mother and father intrusiveness. Significant associations were not substantiated for adolescent social anxiety symptoms. These findings suggest that intrusive parenting has important implications for subsequent parent-adolescent interactions and that similar patterns may characterize some aspects of mother- and father-adolescent relationships.

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Citations

Sep 25, 2017·Journal of Research on Adolescence : the Official Journal of the Society for Research on Adolescence·April Gile ThomasElizabeth Cauffman
Mar 2, 2018·Frontiers in Psychiatry·Saori NishikawaAkemi Tomoda
Apr 10, 2019·Journal of Family Violence·Nada M GoodrumLisa P Armistead

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