Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study

While past research on the care of infants has been mostly with mothers, in recent times there has been a renewed attention to the father–infant relationship. This study examined differences between mother and father parental reflective functioning (PRF) or parental mentalizing; that is, the parenta...

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Main Authors: Cooke, Dawson, Priddis, L., Luyten, P., Kendall, Garth, Cavanagh, Rob
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56854
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author Cooke, Dawson
Priddis, L.
Luyten, P.
Kendall, Garth
Cavanagh, Rob
author_facet Cooke, Dawson
Priddis, L.
Luyten, P.
Kendall, Garth
Cavanagh, Rob
author_sort Cooke, Dawson
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description While past research on the care of infants has been mostly with mothers, in recent times there has been a renewed attention to the father–infant relationship. This study examined differences between mother and father parental reflective functioning (PRF) or parental mentalizing; that is, the parental capacity to reason about their own and their children's behaviors by taking into consideration intentional mental states. Data were collected from 120 couples with a 1-year-old child who were participants in the West Australian Peel Child Health Study. Parental mentalizing was assessed using the Parental Reflective Functioning Questionnaire (PRFQ; Luyten, Mayes, Nijssens, & Fonagy, 2017). Results showed that mother and father mentalizing with their children was independent and that mothers scored slightly higher levels of mentalizing than did fathers. Paternal mentalizing was weakly associated with family income and father education, and was more strongly associated with family functioning than with maternal mentalizing. Implications for theorizing on PRF and fatherhood more generally are discussed.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-568542018-08-21T04:41:05Z Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study Cooke, Dawson Priddis, L. Luyten, P. Kendall, Garth Cavanagh, Rob While past research on the care of infants has been mostly with mothers, in recent times there has been a renewed attention to the father–infant relationship. This study examined differences between mother and father parental reflective functioning (PRF) or parental mentalizing; that is, the parental capacity to reason about their own and their children's behaviors by taking into consideration intentional mental states. Data were collected from 120 couples with a 1-year-old child who were participants in the West Australian Peel Child Health Study. Parental mentalizing was assessed using the Parental Reflective Functioning Questionnaire (PRFQ; Luyten, Mayes, Nijssens, & Fonagy, 2017). Results showed that mother and father mentalizing with their children was independent and that mothers scored slightly higher levels of mentalizing than did fathers. Paternal mentalizing was weakly associated with family income and father education, and was more strongly associated with family functioning than with maternal mentalizing. Implications for theorizing on PRF and fatherhood more generally are discussed. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56854 10.1002/imhj.21664 fulltext
spellingShingle Cooke, Dawson
Priddis, L.
Luyten, P.
Kendall, Garth
Cavanagh, Rob
Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study
title Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study
title_full Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study
title_fullStr Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study
title_full_unstemmed Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study
title_short Paternal and Maternal Reflective Functioning in the Western Australian Peel Child Health Study
title_sort paternal and maternal reflective functioning in the western australian peel child health study
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56854