Levels of Analysis in Cognitive Bases of Maternal Disciplinary Dysfunction
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
- Vol. 25 (3) , 209-215
- https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1025795915802
Abstract
This study tested alternative hypotheses concerning relations between mothers' disciplinary dysfunction and their descriptive versus inference-level interpretations of child noncompliance. Mothers of aggressive boys (MAGGs; n = 19) and mothers of average boys (MAVGs; n = 17) were presented with hypothetical vignettes of compliance situations (mean ages; mothers = 26.8 years, children = 4.5 years). Each vignette ended with the child being compliant or with each of a variety of noncompliant behaviors (request, statement, complaint, ignore, or oppose). Dependent variables were mothers' judgments of noncompliance severity (a descriptive measure), and attributions of defiant intent to the child (an inferential measure). Findings across analyses consistently pointed to attributions as more discriminating than judgments in differentiating between maternal groups. It was concluded that models of maternal discipline dysfunction should focus on analysis of inferential rather than descriptive cognitive responses to child noncompliance, and that parenting interventions should incorporate attribution-training into treatment protocols.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social Information Processing in Compliance Situations by Mothers of Behavior-Problem BoysChild Development, 1995
- Social cognitions as organizers of autonomic and affective responses to social challenge.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1993
- The affective organization of parenting: Adaptive and maladaptative processes.Psychological Bulletin, 1991
- The monitoring skills of troubled mothers: Their problems in defining child devianceJournal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1990
- Frustration-aggression hypothesis: Examination and reformulation.Psychological Bulletin, 1989
- Behavioral Problems and Competencies Reported by Parents of Normal and Disturbed Children Aged Four Through SixteenMonographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1981