浪漫
心理学
发展心理学
依恋理论
社会心理学
精神分析
作者
Jin Zhou,Minjie Ye,Hui Jing Lu,Linglin Chen,Wenjing CHEN,Hongsheng Yang,Lei Chang,Deborah Baofeng Wang,Yili Wu
摘要
Abstract Objective This study aims to explore the mediating role of parental reflective functioning (PRF) and parental sense of competence (PSC) in the effect of romantic attachment on harsh discipline among Chinese parents of young children through both variable‐ and person‐centered approaches. Background Harsh discipline is a negative parenting practice that has detrimental impacts on children. Evidence showed that parents' insecure romantic attachment may contribute to the use of harsh discipline, whereas the psychological mechanism underlying this association remains unclear. Method Participants were 489 Chinese parents of children aged 0 to 5 years. Validated scales were used to assess romantic attachment, PRF (assessed by the prementalizing modes dimension), PSC, and harsh discipline. Mediation analysis and latent profile analysis were conducted. Results PSC mediated the relationship between attachment avoidance and harsh discipline, whereas PRF and PSC played a chain‐mediating role between attachment anxiety and harsh discipline. By using the person‐centered approach, three profiles of attachment were identified: secure (46.8%), dismissive (23.9%), and fearful (29.2%). Compared to secure profile, PRF and PSC sequentially mediated the link between dismissive/fearful profile of attachment and harsh discipline. Conclusions The mediating roles of PRF and PSC elucidated psychological mechanisms for the impact of romantic attachment on harsh parenting, particularly among couples with dismissive and fearful attachment. Implications Improving PRF and PSC is crucial for preventing harsh parenting among insecurely attached couples.
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