Elucidating the legacy of early parent-child relationship: A new developmental synthesis of temperament, internal representation, and behavior
University Of Iowa, Iowa City IA
Investigators
Abstract
ABSTRACT The overarching goal of this research is to promote childrenâs positive socioemotional pathways and to prevent maladaptive pathways. We elucidate why some children embark on positive paths toward prosocial, internalized, rule-abiding conduct, and robust social competence, whereas others enter maladaptive paths toward callousness, disregard for conduct rules and othersâ feelings, antisocial behavior, and impoverished competence. We focus on the parentâchild early relationship, formed in the first years of life, as an influential source of the divergent paths, and we longitudinally chart its complex, indirect yet powerful, long-term legacy. Drawing from our extensive research, correlational and experimental, in low- and high-risk families, we propose that although early relationship may not have long-term unqualified, direct effects, it nevertheless serves as a powerful moderator of future parentâchild unfolding dynamics. Specifically, early relationship can set the stage for an adversarial, negative cascade. In suboptimal, insecure parentâchild dyads, the childâs difficult temperament easily triggers the parentâs negative, harsh, power-assertive control, which, in turn, leads to detrimental child outcomes. In contrast, an early optimal relationship sets the stage for positive, cooperative, effective socialization, and defuses risks of negative cascades. We proposed that parentsâ and childrenâs differing internal representations, expectations, and perceptions of each other (Internal Working Models, IWMs) that characterize suboptimal and optimal relationships and come to guide parentsâ and childrenâs behavior and interactions are the key mechanisms that account for the divergent cascades. We are testing this framework in an ongoing study of 200 community mothers, fathers, and children, richly assessed at 8, 16, 38, and 50-54 months. This application proposes to leverage those massive data to follow up the families at ages 5-6, 7-8, and 9-10. Using state-of-science measures of parentsâ and childrenâs social representations, in Aim 1 we examine how their unfolding IWMs of each other are linked to their relationship quality, how childrenâs Theory of Mind contributes to their IWMs, how childrenâs IWMs of the parents generalize to their representations of the social world, particularly hostile attributional biases, and how the childâs IWMs of two parents become integrated in development. In Aim 2, we examine the parentâs IWM of the child as moderating paths from child difficulty to parental control, and the childâs IWM of the parent as moderating paths from parental control to child outcomes. In Aim 3, we embed our model in the dynamics of the family system. Our multi-method, multi-level approach encompasses observational, genetic, and reported measures of the parentâs and the childâs relational information processing, representations, temperament, relationships, parental control, and child developmental outcomes. Variable- and person-centered analyses rely on structural equation modeling to elucidate divergent developmental cascades. We aim to realize a long-advocated â but yet to be accomplished â vision of research integrating relationships, temperament, representation, and behavior in pathways to childrenâs adjustment.
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