Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains

Eves RJ, Nearchou F, Wolke D, Pluess M, Lemola S (2025)
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | E-Veröff. vor dem Druck | Englisch
 
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Autor*in
Eves, Robert JohnUniBi; Nearchou, Finiki; Wolke, Dieter; Pluess, Michael; Lemola, SakariUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
BackgroundWhether, and how, infant characteristics and parenting quality interact is one of developmental psychology's key questions. However, whether specific interaction patterns replicate across cohorts or developmental outcomes is largely unknown. This study investigates whether infant characteristics and parenting quality are independent predictors (additive effects) of child outcomes or interact such that certain infants particularly suffer from poor parenting (diathesis stress), particularly benefit from good parenting (vantage sensitivity) or both (differential susceptibility).MethodsIndividual participant data from over 30,000 children from four prospective cohorts were pooled. Using a competitive-confirmatory approach of model evaluation, 16 possible permutations of infant characteristics (temperament and birthweight), parenting (maternal-reported stimulating and sensitive parenting) and later developmental outcomes (fluid and crystalised intelligence, internalising and externalising behaviour) were tested. The robustness of results was evaluated by subsequently varying analytic methods, using alternative parenting measures including observer reports and excluding covariates.ResultsAIC values in 10/16 analyses indicated infant characteristics acted independently of maternal-reported parenting for predicting developmental outcomes. Interaction patterns indicating diathesis stress (4/16), vantage sensitivity (2/16) or differential susceptibility (0/16) were rare or absent. However, diathesis-stress patterns were frequently found regarding birthweight and internalising behaviours, which were largely robust to methodological changes.ConclusionsDevelopmental outcomes are more consistently explained by additive effects rather than by interaction effects.
Stichworte
Interaction; moderation; birthweight; temperament; vulnerability; susceptibility; sensitivity
Erscheinungsjahr
2025
Zeitschriftentitel
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
ISSN
0021-9630
eISSN
1469-7610
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/3001635

Zitieren

Eves RJ, Nearchou F, Wolke D, Pluess M, Lemola S. Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 2025.
Eves, R. J., Nearchou, F., Wolke, D., Pluess, M., & Lemola, S. (2025). Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpp.14149
Eves, Robert John, Nearchou, Finiki, Wolke, Dieter, Pluess, Michael, and Lemola, Sakari. 2025. “Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains”. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
Eves, R. J., Nearchou, F., Wolke, D., Pluess, M., and Lemola, S. (2025). Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
Eves, R.J., et al., 2025. Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
R.J. Eves, et al., “Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains”, Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2025.
Eves, R.J., Nearchou, F., Wolke, D., Pluess, M., Lemola, S.: Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. (2025).
Eves, Robert John, Nearchou, Finiki, Wolke, Dieter, Pluess, Michael, and Lemola, Sakari. “Interactions between infant characteristics and parenting factors rarely replicate across cohorts and developmental domains”. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry (2025).

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