Literature DB >> 26143619

Parent-offspring transaction: Mechanisms and the value of within family designs.

Jennifer M Jenkins1, Patrick McGowan2, Ariel Knafo-Noam3.   

Abstract

This article is part of a Special Issue "Parental Care". Parenting is best understood as a transactional process between parents and their offspring. Each responds to cues in the other, adapting their own behavior to that of their partner. One of the goals of parenting research in the past twenty years has been to untangle reciprocal processes between parents and children in order to specify what comes from the child (child effects) and what comes from the parent (parent effects). Child effects have been found to relate to genetic, pre and perinatal, family-wide, and child-specific environmental influences. Parent effects relate to stresses in the current context (e.g. financial strain, marital conflict), personality and ethnicity but also to adverse childhood experiences (e.g. parental mental health and substance abuse, poverty, divorce). Rodent models have allowed for the specification of biological mechanisms in parent and child effects, including neurobiological and genomic mechanisms, and of the causal role of environmental experience on outcomes for offspring through random assignment of offspring-mother groupings. One of the methods that have been developed in the human and animal models to differentiate between parent and child effects has been to study multiple offspring in the family. By holding the parent steady, and studying different offspring, we can examine the similarities and differences in how parents parent multiple offspring. Studies have distinguished between family average parenting, child-specific parenting and family-wide dispersion (the within family standard deviation). These different aspects of parenting have been differentially linked to offspring behavioral phenotypes. Crown
Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Child effects; Differential parenting; Epigenetics; Genetics; Gene–environment correlation; Parenting; Siblings; Transactional process; Twin studies; Within family

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26143619     DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2015.06.018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Horm Behav        ISSN: 0018-506X            Impact factor:   3.587


  5 in total

1.  Supportive and intrusive parenting during early childhood: Relations with children's fear temperament and sex.

Authors:  Melissa A Barnett; Laura V Scaramella
Journal:  J Fam Psychol       Date:  2017-02-13

2.  Skill-experience transactions across development: Bidirectional relations between child core language and the child's home learning environment.

Authors:  Marc H Bornstein; Diane L Putnick; Gianluca Esposito
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2020-07-16

Review 3.  Children of Parents with Eating Disorders.

Authors:  Hunna J Watson; Amy O'Brien; Shiri Sadeh-Sharvit
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2018-09-17       Impact factor: 5.285

4.  The role of interindividual licking received and dopamine genotype on later-life licking provisioning in female rat offspring.

Authors:  Samantha C Lauby; David G Ashbrook; Hannan R Malik; Diptendu Chatterjee; Pauline Pan; Alison S Fleming; Patrick O McGowan
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2021-02-09       Impact factor: 2.708

5.  Anxiety in women - a Swedish national three-generational cohort study.

Authors:  Gunilla Sydsjö; Sara Agnafors; Marie Bladh; Ann Josefsson
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2018-06-04       Impact factor: 3.630

  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.