On the Link between Perceived Parental Rearing Behaviors and Self-conscious Emotions in Adolescents

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Abstract

This study examined relationships between the self-conscious emotions of guilt and shame in both clinical (N = 104) and non-clinical (N = 477) (young) adolescents aged 11–18 years, who completed a questionnaire to assess perceived parental rearing behaviors (EMBU-C) and a scenario-based instrument to measure proneness to guilt and shame (SCEMAS). Results indicated that parental rearing dimensions were positively related to self-conscious emotions. Regarding the non-clinical sample, both favourable (emotional warmth) and unfavourable (rejection) paternal and maternal rearing dimensions were significant correlates of guilt- and shame-proneness. The results for the clinical sample were less conclusive: only maternal emotional warmth and rejection were found to be significantly associated with guilt and shame. Interestingly, no associations between any of the paternal rearing dimensions and self-conscious emotions emerged. Taken together, these results are in keeping with the notion that parental rearing factors are involved in the development of both adaptive and maladaptive self-conscious emotions in adolescents.

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Meesters, C., Muris, P., Dibbets, P., Cima, M., & Lemmens, L. (2017). On the Link between Perceived Parental Rearing Behaviors and Self-conscious Emotions in Adolescents. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 26(6), 1536–1545. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-017-0695-7

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