Breaking down the coercive cycle: How parent and child risk factors influence real-time variability in parental responses to child misbehavior
Publication year
2016Number of pages
20 p.
Source
Parenting, Science and Practice, 16, 4, (2016), pp. 237-256ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ BSI OGG
Journal title
Parenting, Science and Practice
Volume
vol. 16
Issue
iss. 4
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 237
Page end
p. 256
Subject
Developmental PsychopathologyAbstract
Objective. Parent-child coercive cycles have been associated with both rigidity and inconsistency in parenting behavior. To explain these mixed findings, we examined real-time variability in maternal responses to children’s off-task behavior to determine whether this common trigger of the coercive cycle (responding to child misbehavior) was associated with rigidity or inconsistency in parenting. We also examined the effects of risk factors for coercion (maternal hostility, maternal depressive symptoms, child externalizing problems, and dyadic negativity) on patterns of parenting. Design. Mother-child dyads (N = 96; M child age = 41 months) completed a difficult puzzle task, and observations were coded continuously for parent (e.g., directive, teaching) and child behavior (e.g., on-task, off-task). Results. Multilevel continuous-time survival analyses revealed that parenting behavior was less variable when children were off-task. However, when risk factors were higher, a different profile emerged. Combined maternal and child risk was associated with markedly lower variability in parenting behavior overall (i.e., rigidity) paired with shifts towards higher variability specifically when children were off-task (i.e., inconsistency). Dyadic negativity (i.e., episodes when children were off-task and parents engaged in negative behavior) was also associated with higher parenting variability. Conclusion. Risk factors confer rigidity in parenting overall, but in moments when higher-risk parents must respond to child misbehavior, their parenting becomes more variable, suggesting inconsistency and ineffectiveness. This context-dependent shift in parenting behavior may help explain prior mixed findings and offer new directions for family interventions designed to reduce coercive processes
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [227244]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28499]
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