Literature DB >> 12487500

Children's patterns of preserving emotional security in the interparental subsystem.

Patrick T Davies1, Evan M Forman.   

Abstract

Guided by the emotional security hypothesis, this research identified (1) individual differences in children's strategies for preserving their emotional security in the interparental relationship, and (2) the psychosocial and family correlates of these individual differences. Study 1 assessed reactivity to parental conflict simulations among 56 school-age children, whereas Study 2 solicited child and mother reports of 170 young adolescents' reactions to actual marital conflict. Cluster analyses in both studies indicated that children fit three profiles: (1) secure children, who showed well-regulated concern and positive representations of interparental relationships; (2) insecure-preoccupied children, who evidenced heightened distress, involvement or avoidance, and negative representations of interparental relationships; and (3) insecure-dismissing children, who displayed overt signs of elevated distress, avoidance, and involvement and low levels of subjective distress, avoidance and intervention impulses, and negative internal representations. Results in both studies indicated that preoccupied and dismissing children experienced more interparental conflict than did secure children, and preoccupied children evidenced the highest levels of internalizing symptoms. Study 2 results indicated that dismissing children had the highest levels of externalizing symptoms and preoccupied and dismissing children reported more coping, family, and personality difficulties than did secure children.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12487500     DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.t01-1-00512

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  20 in total

1.  Interparental aggression and children's adrenocortical reactivity: testing an evolutionary model of allostatic load.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Melissa L Sturge-Apple; Dante Cicchetti
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2011-08

2.  Interparental Boundary Problems, Parent-Adolescent Hostility, and Adolescent-Parent Hostility: A Family Process Model for Adolescent Aggression Problems.

Authors:  Gregory M Fosco; Melissa Lippold; Mark Feinberg
Journal:  Couple Family Psychol       Date:  2014

3.  Patterns of Adolescent Regulatory Responses During Family Conflict and Mental Health Trajectories.

Authors:  Kalsea J Koss; E Mark Cummings; Patrick T Davies; Dante Cicchetti
Journal:  J Res Adolesc       Date:  2016-06-07

4.  Interparental aggression and infant patterns of adrenocortical and behavioral stress responses.

Authors:  Nissa R Towe-Goodman; Cynthia A Stifter; W Roger Mills-Koonce; Douglas A Granger
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2011-11-29       Impact factor: 3.038

5.  The differential impact of parental warmth on externalizing problems among triangulated adolescents.

Authors:  Rebecca G Etkin; Kalsea J Koss; E Mark Cummings; Patrick T Davies
Journal:  J Genet Psychol       Date:  2014 Jan-Apr       Impact factor: 1.509

6.  The distinctive sequelae of children's coping with interparental conflict: Testing the reformulated emotional security theory.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Meredith J Martin; Melissa L Sturge-Apple; Michael T Ripple; Dante Cicchetti
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2016-09-05

7.  Prospective relations between family conflict and adolescent maladjustment: security in the family system as a mediating process.

Authors:  E Mark Cummings; Kalsea J Koss; Patrick T Davies
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2015-04

8.  The developmental costs and benefits of children's involvement in interparental conflict.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Jesse L Coe; Meredith J Martin; Melissa L Sturge-Apple; E Mark Cummings
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2015-06-08

9.  Adolescents' behavior in the presence of interparental hostility: developmental and emotion regulatory influences.

Authors:  Marc S Schulz; Robert J Waldinger; Stuart T Hauser; Joseph P Allen
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2005

10.  Identifying the temperamental roots of children's patterns of security in the interparental relationship.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Rochelle F Hentges; Melissa L Sturge-Apple
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2015-11-27
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