Abstract
This study explored the development of young children's behavioral strategies for coping with child abuse. It was hypothesized that infants exposed to the controllingness and harshness of interaction with an abusive mother would first learn to inhibit behavior disagreeable to the mother and later learn to comply with maternal demands. It was expected that this developmental change in abused children's behavior would be adaptive in the short term because it would reduce the probability of continued abuse. In the long term, however, compulsive compliance was expected to be maladaptive because it distorted the child's perception of, and response to, reality. In addition, it was hypothesized that the compliant behavior pattern would be used only with controlling interactants during the first 3 years of life. In other words, the descriptions of defensive patterns of behavior applied indiscriminantly by older abused children were not expected to apply to infants and toddlers. Both hypotheses were supported using data drawn from videotapes of mother- child and other adult- child interaction.
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This research was supported by grant No. 90-CA-844 from the National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect to the first author.
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Crittenden, P.M., DiLalla, D.L. Compulsive compliance: The development of an inhibitory coping strategy in infancy. J Abnorm Child Psychol 16, 585–599 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00914268
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00914268