Additive and Moderating Effect of Parents and Friends on Health and Behavior Outcomes During Emerging Adulthood

IF 2.6 3区 心理学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES
Erin E. Wood, Michael M. Criss, Jennifer Byrd-Craven
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Abstract

Relationships with parents and friends may work together to increase the risk of adjustment problems in emerging adulthood. However, it is still undetermined if social relationships act in an additive (i.e., serve as unique predictors) or moderating (i.e., interact with other predictors) fashion. In a cross-sectional sample of 859 female college students ( M age = 19.53, SD = 1.49; 73.9% White) from a large university in the south-central United States, we assessed how parents and best friends impact emerging adult internalizing symptoms, risky behavior, and health problems. We found that low levels of best friend risky behavior attenuated the links between father-emerging adult relationship quality and risky behavior and internalizing symptoms, and high levels of father-emerging adult relationship quality magnified the association between mother-emerging adult relations and internalizing symptoms. Ultimately, these results indicate that relationships with parents and friends served as additive or unique predictors of emerging adult health and behavior.
父母和朋友对成年期健康和行为结果的叠加和调节作用
与父母和朋友的关系可能会共同增加成年后出现适应问题的风险。然而,社会关系是以相加(即作为唯一的预测因素)还是调节(即与其他预测因素相互作用)的方式发挥作用,目前仍未确定。我们对美国中南部一所大型大学的 859 名女大学生(中位年龄 = 19.53,最小值 = 1.49;73.9% 为白人)进行了横断面抽样调查,评估了父母和最好的朋友对新出现的成人内化症状、危险行为和健康问题的影响。我们发现,闺蜜的低水平风险行为削弱了父亲与新成人关系质量与风险行为和内化症状之间的联系,而父亲与新成人关系质量的高水平放大了母亲与新成人关系与内化症状之间的联系。最终,这些结果表明,与父母和朋友的关系是成人健康和行为的附加或独特预测因素。
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来源期刊
Emerging Adulthood
Emerging Adulthood Multiple-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
19.20%
发文量
87
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