Login / Signup

The dynamic and relational nature of parent-child conflict from childhood into emerging adulthood.

S Alexandra BurtSarah CarrollElizabeth A ShewarkKelly L KlumpJenae M NeiderhiserLuke W Hyde
Published in: Developmental psychology (2024)
Although the parent-child relationship is widely regarded as a foundational context for youth development, the developmental origins of this relationship remain unknown. The present study addressed these gaps, leveraging longitudinal and genetically informed methods to illuminate the developmental origins of mother-child conflict as it unfolds from middle childhood into emerging adulthood. Participants consisted of 2,060 twins in 1,030 twin families (51% male, 49% female; 82% White, 10% Black, 1% Asian, 1% Indigenous, 6% multiracial) from the Michigan State University Twin Registry. Families were assessed up to five times. We fitted a series of latent growth curve models (univariate and parallel process) to data from mothers and children, after which we estimated genetic and environmental sources of variance within and covariance among the intercepts and slopes. Parallel process analyses indicated that maternal reports of conflict at baseline shaped their own and their children's perceptions of change in conflict over time but that children's reports of conflict at baseline predicted only their own rate of change in conflict. Subsequent biometric analyses indicated substantial environmental contributions to the intercepts in childhood, as well as prominent environmental origins to the overlap between maternal and child intercepts. By contrast, we observed robust genetically influenced child effects on maternal rate of change and on the association between the maternal and child slopes. Such findings collectively illuminate the dynamic and relational nature of mother-child conflict from childhood into emerging adulthood. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases