What makes for responsive family interactions? Disentangling individual, family-level, and socioeconomic contributions
Autor: | Nina Sokolovic, Dillon T. Browne, Jennifer Jenkins, George Leckie |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Parents
Family Characteristics Family Conflict media_common.quotation_subject Family characteristics 05 social sciences Mothers Variance (accounting) PsycINFO Mental health 050105 experimental psychology Social relation Developmental psychology Feeling Humans Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Product (category theory) Child Psychology Socioeconomic status General Psychology 050104 developmental & child psychology media_common |
Zdroj: | Journal of Family Psychology. 35:1149-1159 |
ISSN: | 1939-1293 0893-3200 |
DOI: | 10.1037/fam0000685 |
Popis: | Families function best, and children benefit the most, when familial interactions are characterized by responsivity-an understanding and consideration of other people's thoughts and feelings. How responsive people are during interactions with others is a product of individual propensities, observed family norms, and unique relationship patterns, though these influences are often hard to disentangle. In the current study, we used a Social Relations Model (SRM) to parse out the extent to which being responsive during family interactions is attributable to individual traits or familial tendencies. Mothers, fathers, and two children each interacted with every other person in the family (N = 198 families) and each person's behavior was coded for the level of responsivity they displayed toward their interactional partner. Data were modeled using a multilevel formulation of the SRM. Between 15% and 30% of the variance in individual's responsivity was attributable to stable traits, with parents tending to be more consistent across all interactional partners than their children. On average, 14% of the variance in responsivity was shared across all members of a given family. Income explained 28% of family-level variance, while other family characteristics, including parent education, parent mental health, interparental conflict, and household chaos, explained little to no variance. Furthermore, it was found that parents contributed more to the family tone of responsivity than did their children. These results provide new insights into what makes family members responsive toward one other and suggest there are likely benefits of providing supports across individual-, family-, and financial-levels to enhance family responsivity. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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