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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Adolescents’ and mothers’ temperament types and their roles in early adolescents’ socioemotional functioning

Johanna VäänänenNoona KiuruTimo AhonenKaisa AunolaRiikka Hirvonen

subject

early adolescenceemotion regulationSocial Psychologygoodness-of-fitEarly adolescencemedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyEducationDevelopmental psychologysosioemotionaaliset taidotvanhempi-lapsisuhdetemperamenttiDevelopmental NeurosciencenuorettunteetDevelopmental and Educational Psychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesBig Five personality traitsLife-span and Life-course Studiesta515media_commonSocioemotional selectivity theoryEarly adolescenceexternalizing problems4. Education05 social sciencesArticlestemperamentrelationship with parentsvanhemmatProsocial behaviorEarly adolescentsTemperamentEmotional developmentPsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)050104 developmental & child psychology

description

The present study examined adolescents’ and mothers’ temperament types and their roles in the socioemotional functioning of early adolescents. A total of 869 sixth-grade students and 668 mothers participated in the study. The students rated their temperament and socioemotional functioning and the mothers rated their own temperament. Latent profile analyses identified four temperament types among the adolescents (resilient, reserved, average, and mixed) and three types among the mothers (resilient, average, and mixed). The results showed that the adolescents with resilient or reserved temperaments reported significantly fewer conduct problems and emotional symptoms, less hyperactivity, and higher prosociality than adolescents with a mixed temperament type. The most adaptive adolescent–mother temperament matches were between a resilient or reserved adolescent and a resilient or average mother; these adolescents reported the highest levels of socioemotional functioning. Mothers with mixed or average temperaments were related to fewer conduct problems and emotional symptoms and less hyperactivity among adolescents with a mixed temperament, while mothers with a resilient temperament type were beneficial for prosocial behavior among adolescents with a mixed temperament. These findings increase understanding of the role of temperament and the interplay between adolescents’ and mothers’ temperaments in the development of early adolescents’ socioemotional adjustment.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201808213894