Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology University of Virginia Charlottesville Virginia USA
Abstract
AbstractIntroductionPrior research suggests several pathways through which verbal aggression manifests across adolescent relationship contexts, including spillover (continuity of aggression across different relationships) and compensation (offsetting an aggressive relationship with less aggression in other relationships). These pathways vary across timescales in ways that between‐person analytic approaches are unlikely to adequately capture. The current study used random intercept cross‐lagged panel modeling (RI‐CLPM) to examine adolescents' spillover and compensatory responses to paternal verbal aggression.MethodsParticipants were 184 adolescents (53.2% female) from a United States community sample participating in a longitudinal study. Annually from ages 13–17, participants reported on their experiences of verbal aggression in their paternal and maternal relationships and participated in observed interactions with a close peer that were coded for aggressive behavior.ResultsSpillover was observed from father‐adolescent to mother‐adolescent and adolescent‐peer contexts in analyses at the between‐person level, likely capturing long‐term, cumulative effects of paternal aggression. Conversely, compensation was observed in analyses at the within‐person level, likely capturing medium‐term (i.e., year‐to‐year) adaptations to paternal aggression: Adolescents who experienced more aggression from their father than expected at a specific time point were less likely to both perpetrate and experience aggression in maternal and peer relationships the following year. Several findings differed across teen gender, with compensation more likely to occur in males than females.ConclusionsThese findings highlight the multiple pathways by which father‐adolescent aggression may be linked to behavior in other relationships in the medium‐ and long‐term. They also support the value of RI‐CLPM in decomposing these effects.
Funder
National Institute of Mental Health
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Cited by
1 articles.
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