1995
DOI: 10.1080/10570319509374519
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Perceptions of deception, divorce disclosures, and communication satisfaction with parents

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Cited by 27 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Young adult children's perceptions of parents' ambiguity predicted lower communication satisfaction, and relational satisfaction followed in a similar trend, although statistically nonsignificant. This supports prior research indicating that when children perceived parents' communication to hide, minimize, or withhold information the parent-child relationship was hurt and offspring were dissatisfied with parents' communication (e.g., Cartwright & Seymour, 2002;Thomas et al, 1995). Overall, openness (e.g., Golish, 2003), even about negative, or inappropriate and sensitive topics (Afifi & McManus, 2010), appears to be more beneficial, at least from the child's perspective.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Young adult children's perceptions of parents' ambiguity predicted lower communication satisfaction, and relational satisfaction followed in a similar trend, although statistically nonsignificant. This supports prior research indicating that when children perceived parents' communication to hide, minimize, or withhold information the parent-child relationship was hurt and offspring were dissatisfied with parents' communication (e.g., Cartwright & Seymour, 2002;Thomas et al, 1995). Overall, openness (e.g., Golish, 2003), even about negative, or inappropriate and sensitive topics (Afifi & McManus, 2010), appears to be more beneficial, at least from the child's perspective.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Parents have difficulty knowing what information, and how much information, to reveal to their children about the divorce (Afifi, 2003;Afifi, McManus, Hutchinson, & Baker, 2007). Parents need to provide their children with some information about the circumstances of the divorce, their relationship with the other parent, and the status of their family to reduce their children's uncertainty and maintain satisfactory relationships with them (Afifi & Schrodt, 2003b;Thomas, Booth-Butterfield, & Booth-Butterfield, 1995). Yet, too much information about the divorce, especially if it is negatively valenced and about the other parent, can be harmful to children's physical and mental health (Afifi et al, 2009;Koerner, Wallace, Lehman, Lee, & Escalante, 2004).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Families grappling with divorce tend to embrace both strategies (Afifi & Schrodt, 2003). Clarity provided from information-seeking can help children cope and reduce uncertainty around key post-divorce tasks like renegotiating family bonds and boundaries (Thomas, Booth-Butterfield, & Booth-Butterfield, 1995;Westberg, Nelson, & Piercy, 2002). Additionally, open communication about uncertainty may increase intimacy between ACOD and their parents (Berger & Calabrese, 1975), an outcome that appears critical to continued support exchange between generations (Fingerman et al, 2012).…”
Section: Uncertainty Management Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%