Title of article :
Linking Informant Discrepancies to Observed Variations
in Young Children’s Disruptive Behavior
Author/Authors :
Andres De Los Reyes، نويسنده , , David B. Henry &
Patrick H. Tolan، نويسنده , , Lauren S. Wakschlag، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Prior work has not tested the basic theoretical
notion that informant discrepancies in reports of children’s
behavior exist, in part, because different informants observe
children’s behavior in different settings. We examined
patterns of observed preschool disruptive behavior across
varying social contexts in the laboratory and whether they
related to parent-teacher rating discrepancies of disruptive
behavior in a sample of 327 preschoolers. Observed
disruptive behavior was assessed with a lab-based developmentally
sensitive diagnostic observation paradigm that
assesses disruptive behavior across three interactions with
the child with parent and examiner. Latent class analysis
identified four patterns of disruptive behavior: (a) low
across parent and examiner contexts, (b) high with parent
only, (c) high with examiner only, and (d) high with parent
and examiner. Observed disruptive behavior specific to the
parent and examiner contexts were uniquely related to
parent-identified and teacher-identified disruptive behavior,
respectively. Further, observed disruptive behavior across
both parent and examiner contexts was associated with
disruptive behavior as identified by both informants. Links
between observed behavior and informant discrepancies were
not explained by child impairment or observed problematic
parenting. Findings provide the first laboratory-based support
for the Attribution Bias Context Model (De Los Reyes and
Kazdin Psychological Bulletin 131:483–509, 2005), which
posits that informant discrepancies are indicative of crosscontextual
variability in children’s behavior and informants’
perspectives on this behavior. These findings have important
implications for clinical assessment, treatment outcomes, and
developmental psychopathology research.
Keywords :
Attribution Bias Context Model .Correspondence . Disagreement . Disruptive behavior .Informant discrepancies
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology