Transmission of Basic Psychological Need Satisfaction Between Parents and Adolescents: The Critical Role of Parental Perceptions

Author:

Kurdi Vanessa12ORCID,Fukuzumi Noriaki3,Ishii Ryo4,Tamura Ayame2,Nakazato Naoki5,Ohtani Kazuhiro6,Ishikawa Shin-ichi2,Suzuki Takashi7,Sakaki Michiko178,Murayama Kou178,Tanaka Ayumi2

Affiliation:

1. University of Reading, UK

2. Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan

3. Kochi University, Japan

4. Nara University of Education, Japan

5. Oita University, Japan

6. Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

7. Kochi University of Technology, Japan

8. University of Tübingen, Germany

Abstract

Although studies have documented the importance of basic psychological need satisfaction in parent–child relationships, a gap remains in understanding how parent and adolescent need satisfaction are associated. Using two longitudinal intergenerational data sets (200 parent–adolescent dyads and 408 mother–adolescent dyads; two waves), we examined whether (a) parents’ need satisfaction predicts adolescents’ need satisfaction (parental needs effect), (b) adolescents’ need satisfaction predicts parents’ need satisfaction (child’s needs effect), and (c) parental perception of adolescent’s need satisfaction predicts adolescents’ need satisfaction (parental perception effect). Findings from cross-lagged path models analogous to actor–partner interdependence models only supported parental perception effects: Parents’ T1 perception of their adolescent’s need satisfaction predicted their adolescent’s T2 self-reported need satisfaction, especially for autonomy and competence needs. Findings highlight the importance of parents’ perceptions, which may benefit the design of new interventions for basic psychological needs.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

Fonds de Recherche du Québec-Société et Culture

Leverhulme Trust

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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3. Reflected Appraisals, Academic Self-Perceptions, and Math/Science Performance During Early Adolescence.

4. Child characteristics and parental educational expectations: Evidence for transmission with transaction.

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