Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Robert E. Emery is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Robert E. Emery.


Psychological Bulletin | 1982

Interparental Conflict and the Children of Discord and Divorce

Robert E. Emery

Data on the relation between marital turmoil (i.e., discord and divorce) and behavior problems in children are reviewed. It is concluded that a relation between the two domains docs exist. Several parameters of this relation are outlined, including type of marital turmoil, form of the childs behavioral response, sex differences, age effects, parental buffering, and effects of parental psychopathology. Conclusions drawn from this review are used to evaluate several broad etiological hypotheses about the effect of marital turmoil on children, and implications for the treatment of behavior problems in children from these families are discussed. Finally, interpretative and methodological refinements are suggested for future research.


Clinical Psychology Review | 2001

The roles of ethnicity and culture in the development of eating disturbance and body dissatisfaction: A meta-analytic review.

Jennifer E. Wildes; Robert E. Emery; Anne D. Simons

This meta-analysis involved 35 studies examining eating disturbance and body dissatisfaction in white and non-white populations and the role of acculturation in the development of eating-related psychopathology. While the role of acculturation in predisposing non-whites to eating disorders remains to be determined, mean effect sizes indicate that whites report more eating disturbance than non-whites. Differences are greatest when studies compare black and white college samples on measures of subclinical eating pathology, like dietary restraint, ideal body shape, and body dissatisfaction. They are weakest when non-clinic populations and clinical forms of eating disturbance, like bulimia nervosa, are examined. These findings suggest that the current literature may be incorrect in its view that subclinical and clinical forms of eating disturbance represent the poles of a single continuum. In addition, they call into question the belief that SES influences the development of eating pathology.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2003

The role of the children of twins design in elucidating causal relations between parent characteristics and child outcomes.

Brian M. D'Onofrio; Eric Turkheimer; Lindon J. Eaves; Linda A. Corey; Kåre Berg; Marit Hornberg Solaas; Robert E. Emery

BACKGROUND Determination of causal connections between parental measures and child outcomes using typical samples is limited by the inability to account for all confounds, both environmental and genetic. This paper discusses the strength of the Children of Twins (COT) design to highlight the role of specific environments. METHODS A new analytical model is presented which helps differentiate and quantify the environmental and genetic processes underlying associations between family-level risk factors and child adjustment. In order to illustrate the COT design, the relation between smoking during pregnancy and child birth weight (BW) is examined in a sample of female twins and their children from Norway and the United States. RESULTS The results illustrate that smoking during pregnancy is influenced by genetic factors. However, the Children of Twins model supports the claim that smoking during pregnancy has a direct environmental influence on BW and that genetic and shared environmental confounds cannot account for the association. CONCLUSIONS An assessment of the strengths and limitations of the Children of Twins design and a comparison with other research strategies suggest that the design plays a unique role in the study of developmental psychology and psychopathology. Finally, the authors describe how methodological advances and future applications of the design will provide additional insight into the causal processes underlying childrens adjustment to environmental stimuli.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 1987

Parental conflict and other correlates of the adjustment of school-age children whose parents have separated

Daniel S. Shaw; Robert E. Emery

In this study, several factors related to psychological adjustment of schoolage children were examined in a sample of 40 lower-class families in which the parents were separated. It was hypothesized that parental conflict and other indices of family adversity, including maternal depression, income, and the length of time past since parental separation, would be important predictors of childrens behavioral adjustment. Parental acrimony was found to be a significant correlate of childrens behavioral problems, even when other family variables were taken into account. In addition, independent and additive effects on childrens functioning were found for parental discord and maternal depression, with some support found for an additional variable, family income. In contrast to some prior investigations, the length of time since parental separation was unrelated to childrens functioning. Results are discussed in terms of Rutters cumulative stress hypothesis and previous research on parental discord.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2000

Distress among young adults from divorced families.

Lisa Laumann-Billings; Robert E. Emery

Researchers find that most children from divorced families function normally, but some clinicians assert that young people are disturbed even many years after a divorce. These accounts may be less discrepant than they appear, because research typically focuses on notably problematic behavior (disorder), whereas case studies emphasize more subtle inner turmoil (distress). In Study 1 college students reported painful feelings, beliefs, and memories about their parents divorce on a reliable new measure, but they also reported accepting the divorce and having few psychological symptoms. Distress about family life was greater among students from divorced than from married families. Study 2 replicated these findings in a community sample of young people from low-income divorced families. In both studies, greater distress was associated with childrens residence, frequency of contact with fathers, interparental conflict, and psychological symptoms.


Behavior Genetics | 2008

Gene-Environment Correlation and Interaction in Peer Effects on Adolescent Alcohol and Tobacco Use

K. Paige Harden; Jennifer HIll; Eric Turkheimer; Robert E. Emery

Peer relationships are commonly thought to be critical for adolescent socialization, including the development of negative health behaviors such as alcohol and tobacco use. The interplay between genetic liability and peer influences on the development of adolescent alcohol and tobacco use was examined using a nationally-representative sample of adolescent sibling pairs and their best friends. Genetic factors, some of them related to an adolescent’s own substance use and some of them independent of use, were associated with increased exposure to best friends with heavy substance use—a gene-environment correlation. Moreover, adolescents who were genetically liable to substance use were more vulnerable to the adverse influences of their best friends—a gene-environment interaction.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2005

A Genetically Informed Study of Marital Instability and Its Association With Offspring Psychopathology

Brian M. D'Onofrio; Eric Turkheimer; Robert E. Emery; Wendy S. Slutske; Andrew C. Heath; Pamela A. F. Madden; Nicholas G. Martin

Parental divorce is associated with a number of emotional and behavioral problems in young-adult offspring, but theoretical and empirical considerations suggest that the relation may be partially or fully accounted for by passive gene-environment correlation or environmental selection characteristics. The current study used the Children of Twins Design to explore whether shared environmental or genetic factors confound the relationship between parental marital instability and measures of psychopathology. Comparisons of the offspring of adult twins in Australia on 3 factors of abnormal behavior, including drug and alcohol, behavioral, and internalizing problems, suggest that environmental influences associated with divorce account for the higher rates of psychopathology. The results are consistent with a causal connection between marital instability and psychopathology in young-adult offspring.


Child Development | 2009

Associations Between Father Absence and Age of First Sexual Intercourse

Jane Mendle; K. Paige Harden; Eric Turkheimer; Carol A. Van Hulle; Brian M. D'Onofrio; Jeanne Brooks-Gunn; Joseph Lee Rodgers; Robert E. Emery; Benjamin B. Lahey

Children raised without a biological father in the household have earlier average ages of first sexual intercourse than children raised in father-present households. Competing theoretical perspectives have attributed this either to effects of father absence on socialization and physical maturation or to nonrandom selection of children predisposed for early sexual intercourse into father-absent households. Genetically informative analyses of the children of sister dyads (N = 1,382, aged 14-21 years) support the selection hypothesis: This association seems attributable to confounded risks, most likely genetic in origin, which correlated both with likelihood of father absence and early sexual behavior. This holds implications for environmental theories of maturation and suggests that previous research may have inadvertently overestimated the role of family structure in reproductive maturation.


Developmental Psychology | 2006

A Genetically Informed Study of the Processes Underlying the Association Between Parental Marital Instability and Offspring Adjustment

Brian M. D'Onofrio; Eric Turkheimer; Robert E. Emery; Wendy S. Slutske; Andrew C. Heath; Pamela A. F. Madden; Nicholas G. Martin

Parental divorce is associated with problematic offspring adjustment, but the relation may be due to shared genetic or environmental factors. One way to test for these confounds is to study offspring of twins discordant for divorce. The current analyses used this design to separate the mechanisms responsible for the association between parental divorce, experienced either before or after the age of 16, and offspring well-being. The results were consistent with a causal role of divorce in earlier initiation of sexual intercourse and emotional difficulties, in addition to a greater probability of educational problems, depressed mood, and suicidal ideation. In contrast, the increased risk for cohabitation and earlier initiation of drug use was explained by selection factors, including genetic confounds. ((c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved).


Journal of Family Psychology | 2008

Marital Conflict and Support Seeking by Parents in Adolescence: Empirical Support for the Parentification Construct

Tara S. Peris; Marcie C. Goeke-Morey; E. Mark Cummings; Robert E. Emery

Parentification, a parent-child dynamic wherein children come to provide ongoing emotional support for their parents, has been documented extensively in the clinical literature; however, it rarely has been studied systematically. Using a community sample of 83 couples and their adolescent children (mean age = 15.26 years; 52% male, 48% female), the authors linked adolescent self-report of parentification to specific youth and adult behaviors using multiple methods and examined its associations with youth adjustment problems. The parentification measure demonstrated strong internal consistency and 1-year stability. Parentification was associated with marital conflict, youth perceptions of threat, low warmth in the parent-child relationship, and the tendency for youths to intervene in marital conflict. Links were also found with youth reports of internalizing and externalizing behavior and poorer competency in close friendships. These findings thus support the parentification construct and provide evidence that parentification may contribute to poor youth outcomes by burdening children with developmentally inappropriate responsibilities.

Collaboration


Dive into the Robert E. Emery's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicholas G. Martin

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian M. D'Onofrio

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew C. Heath

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christopher R. Beam

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

K. Paige Harden

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pamela A. F. Madden

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge