Literature DB >> 24075063

Reactions to children's transgressions in at-risk caregivers: does mitigating information, type of transgression, or caregiver directive matter?

Lauren M Irwin1, John J Skowronski1, Julie L Crouch2, Joel S Milner1, Bettina Zengel3.   

Abstract

This study examined whether caregivers who exhibit high risk for child physical abuse differ from low-risk caregivers in reactions to transgressing children. Caregivers read vignettes describing child transgressions. These vignettes varied in: (a) the type of transgression described (moral, conventional, personal), (b) presentation of transgression-mitigating information (present, absent), and (c) whether a directive to avoid the transgression was in the vignette (yes, no). After reading each vignette, caregivers provided ratings reflecting their: (a) perceptions of transgression wrongness, (b) internal attributions about the transgressing child, (c) perceptions of the transgressing child's hostile intent, (d) own expected negative post-transgression affect, and (e) perceived likelihood of responding to the transgression with discipline that displayed power assertion and/or induction. For moral transgressions (cruelty, dishonesty, hostility, or greed), mitigating information reduced caregiver expectations that they would feel negative affect and, subsequent to the transgression, use disciplinary strategies that display power assertion. These mitigating effects were smaller among at-risk caregivers than among low-risk caregivers. Moreover, when transgressions disobeyed a directive, among low-risk caregivers, mitigating information reduced the expectation that responses to transgressions would include inductive disciplinary strategies, but it did not do so among at-risk caregivers. In certain circumstances, compared to low-risk caregivers, at-risk caregivers expect to be relatively unaffected by transgression-mitigating information. These results suggest that interventions that increase an at-risk caregiver's ability to properly assess and integrate mitigating information may play a role in reducing the caregiver's risk of child physical abuse.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Child physical abuse; Child transgressions; Mitigation; Social information processing

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24075063     DOI: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2013.08.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Abuse Negl        ISSN: 0145-2134


  5 in total

1.  Parents' spontaneous evaluations of children and symbolic harmful behaviors toward their child.

Authors:  Randy J McCarthy; John J Skowronski; Julie L Crouch; Joel S Milner
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2017-02-16

2.  Disciplinary Practices, Metaparenting, and the Quality of Parent-Child Relationships in African-American, Mexican-American, and European-American Mothers.

Authors:  George W Holden; Carol Kozak Hawk; Margaret M Smith; Jimmy Singh; Rose Ashraf
Journal:  Int J Behav Dev       Date:  2017-07-01

3.  Multimethod prediction of physical parent-child aggression risk in expectant mothers and fathers with Social Information Processing theory.

Authors:  Christina M Rodriguez; Tamika L Smith; Paul J Silvia
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2015-11-26

4.  Validating the Voodoo Doll Task as a Proxy for Aggressive Parenting Behavior.

Authors:  Randy J McCarthy; Julie L Crouch; Ariel R Basham; Joel S Milner; John J Skowronski
Journal:  Psychol Violence       Date:  2014-11-24

5.  Are Negative Parental Attributions Predicted by Situational Stress?: From a Theoretical Assumption Toward an Experimental Answer.

Authors:  Marieke Beckerman; Sheila R van Berkel; Judi Mesman; Rens Huffmeijer; Lenneke R A Alink
Journal:  Child Maltreat       Date:  2019-10-08
  5 in total

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