Coparenting and children's disruptive behavior: Interacting processes for parenting sense of competence [0.03%]
共同育儿与儿童破坏性行为:育儿胜任感的交互作用过程
Rachel M Latham,Katharine M Mark,Bonamy R Oliver
Rachel M Latham
Parenting sense of competence (PSOC) is a critical aspect of parental adjustment that may be undermined by children's disruptive behavior. Interparental relationships have been shown to shape how parents react and respond to their children'...
Between- and within-subject associations of PTSD symptom clusters and marital functioning in military couples [0.03%]
军事夫妇中PTSD症状集群与婚姻功能的组内和组间相关性
Elizabeth Allen,Kayla Knopp,Galena Rhoades et al.
Elizabeth Allen et al.
Using data from 570 male service members and their wives, the current study investigated over-time associations between male service members' self-report of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and marital functioning (marital sati...
Early cumulative risk predicts externalizing behavior at age 10: The mediating role of adverse parenting [0.03%]
早期累积风险通过不良养育方式预测10岁儿童的外化问题行为:一项追踪研究
Emily J Gach,Ka I Ip,Arnold J Sameroff et al.
Emily J Gach et al.
Multiple environmental risk factors in early childhood predict a broad range of adverse developmental outcomes. However, most prior longitudinal research has not illuminated explanatory mechanisms. Our main goals were to examine predictive ...
Maternal involvement in children's leisure activities in rural China: Relations with adjustment outcomes [0.03%]
中国农村儿童闲暇活动中的母系参与及其适应结果的关系研究
Siman Zhao,Xinyin Chen
Siman Zhao
This 1-year longitudinal study examined maternal involvement in children's leisure activities and its relations with children's adjustment in rural China. Participants included 184 children (93 boys and 91 girls) initially in third grade (m...
Psychometric evaluation of a measure of intimate partner communication during deployment [0.03%]
部署期间亲密伴侣沟通的心理测量评估
Christina Balderrama-Durbin,Christopher R Erbes,Melissa A Polusny et al.
Christina Balderrama-Durbin et al.
Intimate partner communication has become a part of the daily routine of military couples during deployment. However, there is a scarcity of research examining the individual and relationship implications of communication during deployment,...
Something to talk about: Topics of conversation between romantic partners during military deployments [0.03%]
有的聊:军事部署期间恋人的聊天话题
Sarah P Carter,Laura J Osborne,Keith D Renshaw et al.
Sarah P Carter et al.
Long-distance communication has been frequently identified as essential to military couples trying to maintain their relationship during a deployment. Little quantitative research, however, has assessed the types of topics discussed during ...
Communication of military couples during deployment predicting generalized anxiety upon reunion [0.03%]
部署期间的军事夫妻沟通与重聚时产生的广泛性焦虑之间的预测关系
Leanne K Knobloch,Lynne M Knobloch-Fedders,Jeremy B Yorgason
Leanne K Knobloch
This study draws on the emotional cycle of deployment model (Pincus, House, Christenson, & Adler, 2001) to consider how the valence of communication between military personnel and at-home partners during deployment predicts their generalize...
Steven L Sayers,Frances K Barg,Shahrzad Mavandadi et al.
Steven L Sayers et al.
This concurrent embedded mixed methods study explored important aspects of communication occurring between military service members and their intimate partners during a combat deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan. Fifty-eight participants (32 ...
Recent advances in the understanding of relationship communication during military deployment [0.03%]
关于军事部署期间关系沟通的理解的最新进展
Steven L Sayers,Galena K Rhoades
Steven L Sayers
In recent decades, there has been a dramatic increase in the ability of service members and their intimate partners to communicate while the service member is deployed to a combat zone. Communication among partners is a crucial aspect of in...
Couples coping with stress: Between-person differences and within-person processes [0.03%]
应对压力中的夫妻关系:个体差异与动态过程
Peter Hilpert,Feng Xu,Anne Milek et al.
Peter Hilpert et al.
In intimate relationships, spousal support (or dyadic coping) can directly benefit relationships (i.e., direct effect) and protect the relationship against the negative spillover effects of stress (i.e., buffer effect). As stress-coping the...