Seventy-eight women and 72 men between 22 and 32 years of age completed an interview assessing five aspects of autonomy (independence, decision making, personal control, self-assertion, and selfother responsibility) and five aspects of relatedness (empathy, closeness, communication, concern, and respect) in their relationships with each of their parents. Factor analyses-resulting in congruent solutions for descriptions of mothers and fathers-reduced these data by identifying three relationship dimensions describing experiences of (a) connectedness versus separateness, (b) competence, and (c) emotional autonomy in relation to parents. Significant associations with sex, age, and marital status argued for the construct validity of the relationship dimensions and suggested their usefulness in developmental studies. Moreover, cluster analyses, identifying several empirically distinct and phenomenologically coherent types of young adult-parent relationships, linked the relationship dimensions with intrapsychic and interpersonal realities described by theorists and practitioners in the clinical and developmental literatures.Children's efforts to gain autonomy and restructure emotional ties that bind them to their parents continue well after they leave home and enter the adult world (
Neurofeedback (NF) is a tool that has proven helpful in the treatment of various disorders such as epilepsy or attention deficit disorder (ADHD). Depending on the respective application, a high number of training sessions might be necessary before participants can voluntarily modulate the electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms as instructed. In addition, many individuals never learn to do so despite numerous training sessions. Thus, we are interested in determining whether or not performance during the early training sessions can be used to predict if a participant will learn to regulate the EEG rhythms. Here, we propose an easy to use, but accurate method for predicting the performance of individual participants. We used a sample set of sensorimotor rhythm (SMR 12-15 Hz) NF training sessions (experiment 1) to predict the performance of the participants of another study (experiment 2). We then used the data obtained in experiment 2 to predict the performance of participants in experiment 1. We correctly predicted the performance of 12 out of 13 participants in the first group and all 14 participants in the second group; however, we were not able to make these predictions before the end of the eleventh training session.
Questionnaire data from 376 undergraduates (mean age=19.3 years) were used to test a model describing interrelationships among deidealization, relatedness, autonomy, and insecurity in late adolescents' relationships with their parents. As expected, deidealization predicted greater autonomy and less relatedness (i.e., more disengagement), greater disengagement predicted greater insecurity, and greater insecurity predicted less autonomy. However, disengagement from parents proved to be a "double-edged sword" in that it was linked not only to insecurity, but also to feelings of greater separateness and self-directedness in relation, to parents. Additional analyses identified significant associations between the adolescent/parent relationship variables and the adolescents' psychological health and ego identity status.
Assessed relationship between children's minor illnesses during the first 3 years of life and parenting stress in the 4th year. Also examined whether a good parenting alliance would compensate for or moderate this relationship. Parents of 56 3- to 4-year-olds completed parenting alliance and stress questionnaires. Child morbidity, assessed from medical records, was directly related to mothers' but not fathers' feelings of stress. The parenting alliance was more strongly related to parenting stress for fathers than for mothers. However, child morbidity and parenting alliance interacted in predicting child-related paternal stresses. While fathers in a poor alliance reported more stress, stress was unrelated to their children's illnesses; for fathers in a moderate to strong alliance, illness and stress were positively correlated. Even minor child illnesses appear to be a source of stress for parents.
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