Abstracts - faqs.org

Abstracts

Psychology and mental health

Search abstracts:
Abstracts » Psychology and mental health

Coparenting:a link between marital conflict and parenting in two-parent families

Article Abstract:

Issues relating to coparenting are examined as an explanatory connectiones. The notion that coparenting should be viewed as conceptually separate from other family processes is discussed.

Author: Margolin, Gayla, Gordis, Elana B., John, Richard S.
Publisher: American Psychological Association, Inc.
Publication Name: Journal of Family Psychology
Subject: Psychology and mental health
ISSN: 0893-3200
Year: 2001
Research, Observations, Custody of children, Child custody, Family life surveys, Joint custody of children, Joint child custody

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


The continuance and spillover of everyday tensions in distressed and nondistressed families

Article Abstract:

The examination of daily events and multiple family subsystems are essential in the understanding of family distress. Sequential analyses indicate that distressed, as opposed to nondistressed, families have greater continuance of tensions and more spillover between marital and child-related tensions. Correlations with daily satisfaction ratings show that marital dissatisfaction in distressed families is highly related to marital tensions.

Author: Christensen, Andrew, Margolin, Gayla, John, Richard S.
Publisher: American Psychological Association, Inc.
Publication Name: Journal of Family Psychology
Subject: Psychology and mental health
ISSN: 0893-3200
Year: 1996
Analysis, Family, Problem families, Dysfunctional families, Marital status

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Marital aggression, observed parental hostility, and child behavior during triadic family interaction

Article Abstract:

Children exposed to marital conflict display anxious and distracting behaviors during subsequent child-directed hostility. These behaviors may have been intended to interrupt discussion and parental aggression or to avoid participation. They may increase the parent's annoyance, thereby increasing parent-to-child hostility. The beginning of the process of child-directed hostility and child's distracting behavior remains unclear.

Author: Margolin, Gayla, Gordis, Elana B., John, Richard S.
Publisher: American Psychological Association, Inc.
Publication Name: Journal of Family Psychology
Subject: Psychology and mental health
ISSN: 0893-3200
Year: 1997
Children, Parent and child, Parent-child relations, Conjugal violence

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Subjects list: Psychological aspects
Similar abstracts:
  • Abstracts: "Spiritual starvation"? A case series concerning Christianity and eating disorders. Spirituality and clinical care in eating disorders: A qualitative study
  • Abstracts: The association between direct and relational bullying and behaviour problems among primary school children. The development and adjustment of 7-year old children adopted in infancy
  • Abstracts: An investigation of attention allocation during sequential eye movement tasks. The attentional blink is immune to masking-induced data limits
  • Abstracts: The association of anxiety disorders and obsessive compulsive personality disorder with anorexia nervosa: evidence from a family study with discussion of nosological and neurodevelopmental implications
  • Abstracts: The mediating role of eating psychopathology in the relationship between unhealthy core beliefs and feeding difficulties in a nonclinical group
This website is not affiliated with document authors or copyright owners. This page is provided for informational purposes only. Unintentional errors are possible.
Some parts © 2025 Advameg, Inc.