心理学
儿童纪律
侵略
联想(心理学)
发展心理学
背景(考古学)
社会心理学
变化(天文学)
机制(生物学)
人为因素与人体工程学
毒物控制
认识论
生物
医学
哲学
心理治疗师
环境卫生
物理
古生物学
天体物理学
作者
Kirby Deater‐Deckard,Kenneth A. Dodge
标识
DOI:10.1207/s15327965pli0803_1
摘要
Abstract Debate continues regarding the magnitude and importance ofparenting effects on the development of children's externalizing behavior problems, in spite of the evidence that environments (as well as genes) contribute to individual differences in these behaviors. Research has demonstrated an association between harsh physical discipline and child aggression and conduct problems, a likely causal mechanism that probably operates as a shared environmental factor. We offer four hypotheses about the relation between discipline practices and child externalizing problems that may resolve some debate and help lead toward a more comprehensive understanding of how and when discipline practices will make a substantial difference: 1. The association between discipline and child aggression includes a nonlinear component. 2. The parent behavior-child behavior link varies across cultural groups. 3. Parental discipline effects on children vary according to the context of the broader parent-child relationship. 4. The discipline effect is maximized in same-gender parent-child dyads. Discussion focuses on the role of children's mental representations of discipline experiences as a mediator of discipline effects, and research implications with respect to sampling, measurement, and analytic strategies are noted.
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