“…In fact, the different relationships within a family can be highly interconnected and, thus, what occurs in one relationship may have an effect on others (Cox & Paley, 2003). In light of this, the spillover hypothesis (Erel & Burman, 1995) postulates an interdependence between familial relationships and suggests that emotions and experiences from one relationship (e.g., between parents in the coparental relationship) can spillover onto and influence other relationships (e.g., how parents interact with their children), which in turn may impact the development of the child (Teubert & Pinquart, 2011b). In fact, several researchers have found parenting to either partially or fully mediate the association between coparenting and children’s internalizing and externalizing problem behavior (Jones, Shaffer, Forehand, Brody, & Armistead, 2003; Shook, Jones, Forehand, Dorsey, & Brody, 2010).…”