Journal
JOURNAL OF RESEARCH ON ADOLESCENCE
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 571-590Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jora.12381
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Funding
- Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [RO1-HD054805]
- National Institute of Child Health and Human Development through the Center for Developmental Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [T32-HD07376]
- Fogarty International Center grant [RO3-TW008141]
- Intramural Research Program of the NIH/NICHD
- ERC [695300-HKADeC-ERC-2015-AdG]
- Society for Research on Adolescence
- EUNICE KENNEDY SHRIVER NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CHILD HEALTH & HUMAN DEVELOPMENT [T32HD007376, P2CHD065563, R01HD054805, ZIAHD001119] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
- FOGARTY INTERNATIONAL CENTER [R03TW008141] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
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This study used data from 12 cultural groups in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States; N=1,298) to understand the cross-cultural generalizability of how parental warmth and control are bidirectionally related to externalizing and internalizing behaviors from childhood to early adolescence. Mothers, fathers, and children completed measures when children were ages 8-13. Multiple-group autoregressive, cross-lagged structural equationmodels revealed that child effects rather than parent effects may better characterize how warmth and control are related to child externalizing and internalizing behaviors over time, and that parent effects may be more characteristic of relations between parental warmth and control and child externalizing and internalizing behavior during childhood than early adolescence.
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