Abstract
The central question at issue was the role of both infant and parent temperament in determining child adjustment at age 4. Within the conceptual framework of the New York Longitudinal Study (NYLS), both infant and parent temperament were assessed. Factor analyses yielded three comparable infant and parent temperament factors: Mood, Energy, and Consistency. Correlations with teacher ratings of child adjustment indicated the most significant relationship to be with the infant girls' Mood factor (comparable to the NYLS high-risk “difficult” infant factor). No infant factors were found to relate to boys' adjustment, while maternal Mood was significant across sexes. Indices of the temperamental similarity within families also revealed sex differences relative to adjustment, with similarity across all family members significantly related to adjustment for girls and boy-father dissimilarity significant for boys. Discussion centered around continuity-discontinuity issues relevant to sex differences.
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The authors would like to express appreciation to Alexander Thomas for his help in planning this research and reviewing the manuscript.
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Scholom, A., Zucker, R.A. & Stollak, G.E. Relating early child adjustment to infant and parent temperament. J Abnorm Child Psychol 7, 297–308 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00916539
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00916539