Publication | Open Access
The mediation of mothers' self-fulfilling effects on their children's alcohol use: Self-verification, informational conformity, and modeling processes.
17
Citations
53
References
2008
Year
Substance UseSocial PsychologyAlcohol UseInformational ConformityAdolescenceSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologyModeling ProcessesDevelopmental PsychologyAlcohol MisuseFamily InteractionChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesPsychiatrySelf-fulfilling Prophecy EffectsAlcohol AbuseApplied Social PsychologySelf-fulfilling EffectsAlcohol DependenceChild DevelopmentSubstance AbuseAddictionSubstance AddictionMedicineSelf-verification Processes
This research examined whether self-fulfilling prophecy effects are mediated by self-verification, informational conformity, and modeling processes. The authors examined these mediational processes across multiple time frames with longitudinal data obtained from two samples of mother-child dyads (N-sub-1 = 486; N-sub-2 = 287), with children's alcohol use as the outcome variable. The results provided consistent support for the mediational process of self-verification. In both samples and across several years of adolescence, there was a significant indirect effect of mothers' beliefs on children's alcohol use through children's self-assessed likelihood of drinking alcohol in the future. Comparatively less support was found for informational conformity and modeling processes as mediators of mothers' self-fulfilling effects. The potential for self-fulfilling prophecies to produce long-lasting changes in targets' behavior via self-verification processes are discussed.
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