Publication | Closed Access
Mother–Adolescent Conflict: Adolescent Goals, Maternal Perspective‐Taking, and Conflict Intensity
42
Citations
23
References
2008
Year
Dominance GoalsSocioemotional DevelopmentBehavioral SciencesAdolescent CognitionConflict IntensityYounger AdolescentsGender StudiesMedicineFamily InteractionFamily PsychologySocial SciencesAdolescent DevelopmentParent LeadershipDyadic ConcernFamily RelationshipsPsychologyChild DevelopmentDevelopmental Psychology
Younger and older adolescents were interviewed about their goals in recent disagreements with their mothers. Six goals were identified: instrumental (simply gaining their immediate desire); dyadic concern; achieving emotional support; autonomy; dominance; and nonengagement (avoidance of conflict). Younger adolescents reported significantly more instrumental and significantly fewer emotional support and dominance goals than did older adolescents. Maternal perspective‐taking predicted more dyadic concern and fewer dominance goals, as well as more nonengagement goals for younger adolescents. Dominance goals mediated the effect of maternal dyadic perspective‐taking on conflict intensity for older adolescents.
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