Interpretations of child compliance in individuals at high- and low-risk for child physical abuse.

Child Abuse Negl

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Northwestern University Medical School, 259 E. Erie St., Suite 251, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.

Published: March 2003

Objective: Our studies compared individuals at high- and low-risk for child physical abuse on measures of social information processing.

Method: Two studies were conducted using similar methods. Twenty-eight childless women in Study 1 and 36 mothers in Study 2 read vignettes of parent-child interactions in which the child's level of compliance was difficult to interpret. Participants were asked a series of questions about the child's behavior and their own reactions.

Results: Accuracy and bias in identifying compliant behavior were assessed using a signal detection paradigm. In both samples, high- and low-risk participants did not differ in their overall accuracy in identifying children's behaviors. However, they used different evaluation standards such that high-risk participants were biased toward seeing more noncompliance and low-risk participants were biased toward seeing more compliance. High- and low-risk participants also made different types of errors in interpreting children's behavior. Low-risk participants were more likely to misinterpret noncompliant behavior as compliant, and there was a trend for high-risk participants to not perceive compliant behavior when it occurred. There were no differences in reported disciplinary responses in either study and the results for affective reactions were mixed.

Conclusions: Specific differences in social information processing between high- and low-risk individuals replicated across samples, suggesting a reliable association between evaluation standards and risk of child physical abuse. However, the absence of differences in reported discipline and inconsistent findings on affective reactions indicate the need to identify the mechanism through which cognition influences parenting behavior.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0145-2134(03)00007-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

high- low-risk
20
low-risk participants
16
child physical
12
physical abuse
12
individuals high-
8
low-risk child
8
compliant behavior
8
evaluation standards
8
high-risk participants
8
participants biased
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!