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Adolescent pubertal status and affective family relationships: A multivariate assessment

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Abstract

This research attempted to more adequately dimensionalize the study of affective family relations during adolescent pubertal maturation by employing a multivariate approach. Fifty-one families responded to an assessment battery consisting of a series of questionnaires designed to measure affective relations between parents and their adolescent children. Families were classified into prepubertal, transpubertal, or postpubertal groups according to their modal response on pubertal status criteria. A stepwise discriminant analysis was performed to identify measures that maximize between groups differences. Based on this analysis, a correct classification rate of 70% was achieved for all families. The two significant discriminant functions that emerged indicate that differences in family relationships are due to the transformation of mother-adolescent and father-adolescent relations. The pattern of results replicate those of other researchers and provide elaborations concerning the affective nature of family relations during adolescence.

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Received his Ph.D. in Life-span Developmental Psychology from West Virginia University in 1984. Research interests in dialectical models of adolescent development.

Received his Ph.D. from the University of Arkansas in 1979. Research interests in decision-making in adolescence and adulthood.

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Papini, D.R., Sebby, R.A. Adolescent pubertal status and affective family relationships: A multivariate assessment. J Youth Adolescence 16, 1–15 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02141543

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02141543

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