Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture

abstract: Longitudinal data from European-American (EA) and Mexican-American (MA) families (n = 179 mothers, fathers, and youth; 41% MA) was used to test a bio-psycho-cultural model of the effect of non-responsive parenting on externalizing problems in young adult offspring through the effect on the...

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Other Authors: Mahrer, Nicole Eva (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.30011
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-300112018-06-22T03:06:22Z Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture abstract: Longitudinal data from European-American (EA) and Mexican-American (MA) families (n = 179 mothers, fathers, and youth; 41% MA) was used to test a bio-psycho-cultural model of the effect of non-responsive parenting on externalizing problems in young adult offspring through the effect on the stress response system. Parenting behavior (acceptance, rejection, harsh discipline) was assessed when children were in late childhood (12-13 years), cortisol samples were collected during late adolescence (18-19 years), and externalizing problems were measured in young adulthood (21-22 years). Latent profile analyses were used to examine patterns of parenting behavior in EA and MA families. A path analysis framework was used to examine how non-responsive parenting interacted with acceptance to predict adolescent stress response and subsequent externalizing problems in EA and MA young adults. Results showed different patterns of parenting behavior in EA versus MA families, with MA families demonstrating a profile of high acceptance and high non-responsiveness at higher rates than EA families. In MA families, youth adherence to the traditional cultural value of familismo related to more positive perceptions of parenting behavior. Across ethnic groups, parent rejection only predicted higher externalizing problems in young adults when acceptance was high. The effect of parent harsh discipline on offspring stress response differed by ethnicity. In MA families, harsh discipline predicted dysregulated stress response in youth when acceptance was low. In EA families, harsh discipline did not relate to youth stress response. Overall, results increase the understanding of normative and adaptive parenting behaviors in MA families. Findings inform the development of culturally-competent parenting-focused interventions that can better prevent dysregulated stress response and externalizing behavior problems in ethnically diverse youth. Dissertation/Thesis Mahrer, Nicole Eva (Author) Luecken, Linda (Advisor) Wolchik, Sharlene (Advisor) Tein, Jenn-Yun (Committee member) Pina, Armando (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Psychology eng 108 pages Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.30011 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture
description abstract: Longitudinal data from European-American (EA) and Mexican-American (MA) families (n = 179 mothers, fathers, and youth; 41% MA) was used to test a bio-psycho-cultural model of the effect of non-responsive parenting on externalizing problems in young adult offspring through the effect on the stress response system. Parenting behavior (acceptance, rejection, harsh discipline) was assessed when children were in late childhood (12-13 years), cortisol samples were collected during late adolescence (18-19 years), and externalizing problems were measured in young adulthood (21-22 years). Latent profile analyses were used to examine patterns of parenting behavior in EA and MA families. A path analysis framework was used to examine how non-responsive parenting interacted with acceptance to predict adolescent stress response and subsequent externalizing problems in EA and MA young adults. Results showed different patterns of parenting behavior in EA versus MA families, with MA families demonstrating a profile of high acceptance and high non-responsiveness at higher rates than EA families. In MA families, youth adherence to the traditional cultural value of familismo related to more positive perceptions of parenting behavior. Across ethnic groups, parent rejection only predicted higher externalizing problems in young adults when acceptance was high. The effect of parent harsh discipline on offspring stress response differed by ethnicity. In MA families, harsh discipline predicted dysregulated stress response in youth when acceptance was low. In EA families, harsh discipline did not relate to youth stress response. Overall, results increase the understanding of normative and adaptive parenting behaviors in MA families. Findings inform the development of culturally-competent parenting-focused interventions that can better prevent dysregulated stress response and externalizing behavior problems in ethnically diverse youth. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2015
author2 Mahrer, Nicole Eva (Author)
author_facet Mahrer, Nicole Eva (Author)
title Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture
title_short Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture
title_full Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture
title_fullStr Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: Examining the roles of stress response and culture
title_sort understanding the effect of non-responsive parenting on offspring externalizing problems in young adulthood: examining the roles of stress response and culture
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.30011
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