谢为伊:在SSCI(2025中科院2区)期刊《Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology》发表论文

发布者:网站管理员发布时间:2026-04-29浏览次数:10

Title: Young Chinese and British  Children’s Emotional Dependency  on Mothers and Psychosocial  Adjustment: The Moderating Role  of Maternal Attitudes


Abstract Children’s emotional dependency is often perceived as a barrier to their psychosocial  adjustment. This study aimed to explore the moderating roles of culture and maternal attitudes  in the relation between young children’s emotional dependency and psychosocial adjustment.  The study invited mothers of 130 young children, comprising 63 from the United Kingdom  (Mean age [M]=61.56months, SD=4.56months) and 67 from China (M=60.04months,  SD=5.44months). The results revealed significant cross-cultural differences in the correlation  between children’s emotional dependency on mothers and psychosocial adjustment; the  correlation was negative for British children but not statistically significant for Chinese children.  Additionally, Chinese mothers exhibited more positive and fewer negative attitudes toward  their children’s emotional dependency compared to their British counterparts. Furthermore,  both Chinese and British mothers’ positive attitudes played a moderating role in the relation  between children’s emotional dependency and social skills, particularly in terms of engagement  and empathy. When mothers displayed more positive attitudes, emotional dependency was  positively associated with empathy and engagement skills. Conversely, when mothers exhibited  fewer positive attitudes, these relations were negative. This study’s findings underscored  the importance of two intertwined contextual factors—culture and maternal attitudes—in  understanding the adaptive significance of a child’s emotional dependency. 


Keywords emotional dependency, cross-cultural research, maternal attitudes, psychosocial adjustment,  social skills, problem behaviors


DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/00220221261437012