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Commonality and Specificity in Chinese Parental Emotion Socialization and Adolescents’ Psychological Functioning: A Bifactor Approach

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Abstract

Understanding of the conceptual relations among different parental emotion socialization processes (i.e., whether and how they are distinct or share common components) and their developmental implications for adolescents is limited, especially within Asian cultural contexts. Guided by the parental emotion socialization framework, this study aimed to: (1) investigate a conceptual model that delineates general and specific components in parental emotion socialization with both adolescents and parents within a contemporary Asian cultural context–Beijing, China, and (2) examine whether the common and specific processes predicted adolescents’ psychological functioning six months later for both informants. Participants included 1486 Chinese adolescents (Mage = 15.11 years; 52.6% males) and their primary caregivers (Mage = 44.93 years; 44.9% males). Both adolescents and parents self-reported on parental emotion socialization and adolescents completed a measure of their psychological functioning at two time-points. We evaluated the fit of one-factor, first-order factor, and bifactor models for both informants separately. Results indicated a good fit of the bifactor model with a proposed general factor of parent meta-emotion philosophy and specific factors of parental reaction and emotional expressivity, with partial factorial invariance of the parental reaction factor across informants. The common and specific factors uniquely predicted adolescents’ psychological functioning. Findings inform the parental emotion socialization framework, particularly our conceptual understanding of the different processes with Asian samples, and have practical implications for the design and implementation of comprehensive and culturally relevant parenting interventions in support of adolescent psychological functioning.

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Availability of Data and Materials

The materials and data from this study are made available on Open Science Framework (OSF)–an open source research platform. The data used in the research are available and can be obtained at: https://osf.io/jzwsg/?view_only=7b37a58439974d9d8d652bb7c188daeb. The materials and analysis code used in the research are available and can be obtained at: https://osf.io/jzwsg/?view_only=7b37a58439974d9d8d652bb7c188daeb. This study was not pre-registered.

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Acknowledgements

We would like to acknowledge the assistance of research interns at the Peer Relations Support Group at UW-Madison, Department of Educational Psychology: Feng Jia Shi and Stella Sun Dai Ling.

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Contributions

GHY conceptualized and designed the study, obtained ethical approval and clinical trial registration, and drafted the manuscript. C.S.L.C. participated in the study’s design and helped to draft the manuscript. All authors approved the manuscript.

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Correspondence to GeckHong Yeo.

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The authors declare that they have no Conflict of Interest.

Ethics Approval

Approval was granted by the Ethics Committee of the National University of Singapore (protocol number: NUS-IRB-13-188).

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Informed consent will be obtained from all individual participants (and their parents) included in the study.

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Consent for publication was obtained from all individual participants (and their parents) included in the study.

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Yeo, G., Cheah, C.S.L. Commonality and Specificity in Chinese Parental Emotion Socialization and Adolescents’ Psychological Functioning: A Bifactor Approach. Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol 51, 743–760 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-022-01017-w

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-022-01017-w

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