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Journal Article

Citation

O'Neal CR, Magai C. Dev. Psychopathol. 2005; 17(2): 467-487.

Affiliation

New York University, Institute for Prevention Science, NYU Child Study Center, NYU School of Medicine, 215 Lexington Avenue, 14th Floor, New York, NY 10016, USA. onealc01@med.nyu.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

16761554

Abstract

When children experience emotions, do they view their primary caregiver as reacting in a different manner depending on the children's different emotions? Parental socialization of negative emotions and child psychopathology were examined among 161 inner city youth ages 11-14 years. These early adolescents were more likely to perceive their parents as responding in a different manner to different emotions than responding in the same way to different emotions. In addition, we asked if emotion-specific socialization strategies tell us more about child psychopathology than global socialization strategies do. Exploratory analyses suggest that a mixture of both emotion-specific and global socialization strategies may best predict child psychopathology. It remains important to clarify the emotional context of socialization strategies.


Language: en

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