Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Sun Yat‐Sen University Guangzhou China
2. School of Public Administration Southwest Jiaotong University Chengdu China
3. Department of Educational and Developmental Science College of Education University of South Carolina Columbia South Carolina USA
4. School of Sport Management and Recreation Guangzhou Sport University Guangzhou China
Abstract
AbstractExisting literature has documented that parenting links to children's hostile attribution biases (HAB). However, little is known about the role played by parental emotion socialization in children's HAB. To address this research gap, the present study investigated the role of parental responses to children's negative emotions (PRCNE) in predicting adolescents' HAB using a longitudinal study. Adolescents (N = 203; Mage = 13.61 years old at Time 1), who were recruited from a city in mainland China, reported on their mothers' PRCNE and their own HAB at two waves over a year. The results showed that mothers' supportive responses (composed of emotion‐focused responses and problem‐focused responses) significantly predicted adolescents' reduced HAB over time; however, PRCNE including expressive encouragement, minimization, and nonsupportive responses (composed of punitive responses and parental distress) had no significant relation with adolescents' HAB. These findings add to the existing literature investigating antecedents to adolescents' social information processing deficits and biases.
Funder
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology