Relation of temperament and authoritative parenting on subtypes of adolescent behaviour
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Over the years, researchers have investigated direct, conditional, and meditational
pathways of adolescent aggression in relation to both temperament and parenting
behaviours. However, no study to date has considered these relations with respect to a
measure of aggression differentiated by form (e.g., overt, relational) and function (e.g.,
proactive, reactive). The present study examined the differential association of adolescent
temperament and authoritative parenting on four subtypes of aggression. Participants
included mothers, fathers, and one adolescent (between the ages of 10-19) from 663
families, recruited through random digit dialing. Parents reported on their child's
temperament and occurrence of aggressive behaviours in addition to the perception of
their own authoritative parenting. Adolescents reported on their own temperament and
aggressive behaviours as well as on both their mother and father's authoritative parenting.
Multiple regression analyses confirmed predictions that some aspects of temperament and
authoritative parenting provide motivation towards the engagement of different
aggressive behaviours. For example, higher negative affect was related to reactive types
of aggression, whereas a strong desire for novel or risky behaviours related to proactive
aggression. However, differences in effortful control altered the trajectory for both
relationships. Higher levels of self-regulation reduced the impact of negative affect on
reactive-overt aggression. Greater self-regulation also reduced the impact of surgency on
proactive-overt aggression when age was a factor. Structural equation modeling was then
used to assess the process through which adolescents become more or less susceptible to
impulsive behaviours. Although the issue ofbi-directionality cannot be ruled out,
temperament characteristics were the proximal correlate for aggression subtypes as
opposed to authoritative parenting dimensions. Effortful control was found to partially mediate the relation between parental acceptancelinvolvement and reactive-relational and
reactive-overt aggression, suggesting that higher levels of warmth and support as
perceived by the child related to increased levels of self-regulation and emotional control,
which in tum lead to less reactive-relational and less reactive-overt types of aggression in
adolescents. On the other hand, negative affect partially mediated the relation between
parental psychological autonomy granting and these two subtypes of aggression,
supporting predictions that higher levels of autonomy granting (perceived independence)
related to lower levels of frustration, which in tum lead to less reactive-relational and
reactive-overt aggression in adolescents. Both findings provide less evidence for the
evocative person-environment correlation and more support for temperament being an
open system shaped by experience and authoritative parenting dimensions. As one of the
first known studies examining the differential association of authoritative parenting and
temperament on aggression subtypes, this study demonstrates the role parents can play in
shaping and altering their children's temperament and the effects it can have on
aggressive behaviour.