Sentences with phrase «parental psychological control»

Accumulating evidence, part of which is based on research on parental psychological control and much of which is based on Western samples, has shown that perceived controlling parenting relates to internalizing problems such as depression, low self - esteem and anxiety (e.g., Barber, Stolz, & Olsen, 2005) as well as to externalizing problems, including delinquency, antisocial behavior, and substance use (e.g., Walker - Barnes & Mason, 2004).
In turn, destructive marital conflict was related to decreased parental warmth and increased parental psychological control; these parenting problems were associated with greater child internalizing and externalizing problems at the third time point.
Overall, the results of these studies indicated that the Italian form of the DAPCS might be a useful instrument to assess the two domain - specific types of parental psychological control among Italian - speaking adolescents.
It appears that overprotection measures in the chronic illness literature to date have largely measured parental behavioral control — which includes parenting behaviors such as limit setting and parental monitoring — rather than parental psychological control — which includes intrusiveness and criticism / guilt induction.
«Violating the self: parental psychological control of children and adolescents,» in Intrusive Parenting: How Psychological Control Affects Children and Adolescents, ed B. K. Barber (Washington, DC: American Psychological Association), 15 — 52.
By disentangling parental monitoring, and other types of behavioral control, from parental psychological control, a more consistent pattern of findings of negative outcomes associated with such parenting styles may emerge.
Parental psychological control dimensions: Connections with Russian preschoolers» physical and relational agression.
Parental psychological control and aggression in youth: Moderating effect of emotion dysregulation.
[book] Barber, B. K. / 2002 / Violating the Self: Parental Psychological Control of Children and Adolescents, In Intrusive Parenting: How psychological control affects children and adolescents / American Psychological Association
parental psychological control
Parental psychological control: Revisiting a neglected construct.
More parental psychological control predicted increases in boys» and girls» internalizing problems and girls» externalizing problems.
This search was guided by the content of questionnaires and observation scales that are widely used to assess psychological control (i.e., Child Report of Parental Behavior Inventory; [189], Parental Psychological Control measure; [28], Psychological Control Scale; [10]-RRB-.
Based on the book titled, «Intrusive Parenting: How Psychological Control Affects Children and Adolescents,» intrusive parenting is defined as a parental psychological control.

Not exact matches

I'll also make up some convenient stories for you to believe in using a parental «reward or punishment» system with several nifty psychological control factors.
Control, she would write, has «multiple facets... positive control is measured by parental monitoring and democratic parenting; negative control is measured by psychological control and punitive parenting.Control, she would write, has «multiple facets... positive control is measured by parental monitoring and democratic parenting; negative control is measured by psychological control and punitive parenting.control is measured by parental monitoring and democratic parenting; negative control is measured by psychological control and punitive parenting.control is measured by psychological control and punitive parenting.control and punitive parenting.»
Such maladaptive perfectionism style of parenting is also labeled as helicopter or intrusive parenting, which is characterized by «manipulative» parental behaviors and «psychological control» as cited in a report on Tech Times.
70, No. 4, Parental Support, Psychological Control, and Behavioral Control: Assessing Relevance Across Time, Culture, and Method (2005), pp.
The psychologist agreed and recommended that Appellee have sole parental control and that psychological therapy continue with a single therapist with the ultimate goal of bettering the relationship between the children and Appellant.»
If the three characteristic diagnostic indicators of attachment based «parental alienation» are evident in the child's symptom display, then this represents definitive clinical evidence for the child's psychological control by a narcissistic / (borderline) parent.
The presence in the child's symptom display of the three characteristic diagnostic indicators (i.e., the «psychological fingerprints») of the child's psychological influence and control by a narcissistic / (borderline) parent represents sufficient and definitive clinical evidence that the symptomatic child - initiated cut - off of the child's relationship with the other parent is the direct result of the pathogenic parenting practices of a narcissistic / (borderline) parent (i.e., the allied and supposedly «favored» parent), who is using the child in a role - reversal relationship as a «regulatory other» (see my blog essay: Parental Alienation as Child Abuse: The Regulating Other) for the psychopathology of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent.
The valid concern is that the narcissistic targeted parent will externalize responsibility by alleging «parental alienation,» thereby continuing the child's exposure to emotional and psychological abuse from profound parental empathic failure and nullification of the child's self - authenticity, physical and psychological control and intimidation of the child, or active sexual exploitation of the child, and if the child reports the abuse the narcissistic predator simply alleges that it's a «false allegation» because of «parental alienation.»
Parenting behaviors (behaviors of parents directed to the child) were assigned to the parenting dimensions: (1) support, (2) authoritative control, (3) authoritarian control, (4) behavioral control — including active monitoring3, (5) psychological control, (6) general control — concepts that are too broad for classification in a specific kind of control, (7) general parenting — aspects that covered both support and control, (8) indirect parenting behavior — parental knowledge and child disclosure (see footnote 3), and (9) other parenting — all remaining parenting that did not fit the other categories (e.g., fairness of discipline, co-parenting).
[jounal] Barber, B. K. / 2005 / Parental support, psychological control, and behavioral control: Assessing relevance across time, culture, and method / Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 137
Psychological control has been consistently associated with greater depression (Barber, Stolz, & Olsen, 2005), whereas parenting styles characterized by high acceptance and moderate levels of firm control are associated with a range of positive child outcomes (e.g., less depression, greater self - efficacy, and adherence to parental standards; Barber et al., 2005; Baumrind, 1991; Lamborn, Mounts, Steinberg, & Dornbusch, 1991).
The strongest links were found for parental monitoring, psychological control, and negative aspects of support such as rejection and hostility, accounting for up to 11 % of the variance in delinquency.
Three dimensions of parenting style that have been repeatedly identified in the literature were examined in the present study: (a) psychological control (regulating an adolescent's thoughts and opinions through guilt and criticism), (b) firm control (managing the adolescent's behavior by closely monitoring activities and setting behavioral limits), and (c) acceptance (parental demonstrations of love and support).
To examine the role of diabetes - specific parental regulation and general parenting dimensions (responsiveness and psychological control) in treatment adherence throughout adolescence and emerging adulthood.
The relation between perceived acceptance - rejection and parental control, and the joint, interactive, and singular influence of each form of parenting on youths» behavioral and psychological functioning.
«Barber (2002) defines psychological control as comprising «parental behaviors that are intrusive and manipulative of children's thoughts, feelings, and attachments to parents, and are associated with disturbances in the boundaries between the child and the parent» (p. 15)(see also Bradford & Barber, this issue).»
Psychological attributes of parents also influence the way parents manage their children.26 Indeed a meta - analysis of 30 studies focused on the Big 5 personality characteristics involving almost 6,000 parent - child dyads revealed that higher levels extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness and openness to experience and lower levels of neuroticism were related to greater warmth and behavioural control on the part of parents, whereas higher levels of agreeableness and lower levels of neuroticism were related to the provision of more support for autonomy; 27 somewhat similar results emerged in a related meta - analysis that also examined the influence of parental psychological problems onPsychological attributes of parents also influence the way parents manage their children.26 Indeed a meta - analysis of 30 studies focused on the Big 5 personality characteristics involving almost 6,000 parent - child dyads revealed that higher levels extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness and openness to experience and lower levels of neuroticism were related to greater warmth and behavioural control on the part of parents, whereas higher levels of agreeableness and lower levels of neuroticism were related to the provision of more support for autonomy; 27 somewhat similar results emerged in a related meta - analysis that also examined the influence of parental psychological problems onpsychological problems on parenting.28
Augmenting Perez - Olivas et al.'s (2008) arguments, Mills et al. (2007) propose that parental overprotection is not a sign of nurturing, but rather shows a tendency toward exerting psychological control over the children, which seems to be triggered by the parents» own psychological instability.
The final significant finding was that high exposure to parental loyalty conflict behaviors and low self - esteem were associated with psychological distress even after controlling for quality of the parent — child relationship.
On the other hand, psychological control is a parental behavior that interferes with the adolescent's emotional development, restricting emotional intelligence and diminishing the competency to establish and express one's own feelings.
Selected scales from the Holmbeck, Belvedere, et al. (1995) macrocoding system (based on a system developed by Smetana, Yau, Restrepo, and Braeges, 1991) were also used as measures of parental acceptance, behavioral control, and psychological control.
Mean levels of psychological well - being by parental status, controlling for sociodemographic background variables.
In this study there was strong support for a link between crucial variables to the psychological climate of the divorced families (e.g., parental loyalty conflict, low caring in terms of emotional coldness, indifference, neglect, and high control in terms of overprotection, intrusion, excessive contact, infantilization, and prevention of independent behavior), self - esteem and well - being in adulthood.
Depressive symptoms in adolescence: The role of perceived parental support, psychological control, and proactive control in interaction with 5 - HTTLPR.
Yet, underlying the variations in interpretation of and coping with parental behavior, the psychological costs associated with perceived controlling parenting are essential and universal.
The cross-lagged effects of perceived psychological control remained significant after controlling for two important parenting dimensions (i.e., parental responsiveness and behavioral control; Study 1) and were found in all types of parent - adolescent dyads except for the mother - daughter dyad (Study 2).
Finally, results evidenced significant effects for adolescents» and parental gender on achievement - oriented psychological control, with mothers rated higher than fathers by males and fathers rated higher than mothers by females.
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