Research with two-parent European households has suggested that secrecy, and not disclosure of information per se, predicts adolescent adjustment difficulties. The present study attempted to replicate this finding using data from a 4-wave study of 358 poor, urban adolescents (47% male; M age = 12 yrs) in the United States, most of whom (>92%) were African American. Adolescents self-reported secrecy, disclosure, depressive symptoms, and delinquency at each wave. Confirmatory factor analyses revealed that a two-factor model with secrecy and disclosure as separate, but correlated, factors was a better fit than a one-factor model. However, predictive models differed from previous research. Secrecy did not predict depressive symptoms, rather ...
Adolescents' secrecy is intertwined with perception of parents' behaviors as acts of privacy invasio...
Juvenile offending is a wide-spread problem in Western societies: More than half of the adolescents ...
This 3-year, multi-informant study examined whether youths' perceptions of parental privacy invasion...
Recent research has identified adolescent disclosure to parents as a powerful predictor of adolescen...
A 2-wave survey study among 1173 10-14-year-olds tested the longitudinal contribution of secrecy fro...
Contains fulltext : 55705.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A 2-wave surve...
Traditional views regard secrecy as problematic, and associated research among adults almost ex-clus...
Increasing bodies of evidence suggest that keeping secrets may be detrimental to well-being and adju...
Traditional views regard secrecy as problematic, and associated research among adults almost exclusi...
Adolescent disclosure to parents has been associated with a variety of positive adolescent outcomes....
The current longitudinal study examined adolescent gender differences in the developmental changes a...
It is a household notion that secrecy is bad while sharing is good. But what about shared secrets? T...
ObjectivesThis study examined (a) associations of parent-adolescent relationship characteristics and...
This 3-year, multi-informant study examined whether youths’ perceptions of parental privacy invasion...
Adolescents' secrecy is intertwined with perception of parents' behaviors as acts of privacy invasio...
Adolescents' secrecy is intertwined with perception of parents' behaviors as acts of privacy invasio...
Juvenile offending is a wide-spread problem in Western societies: More than half of the adolescents ...
This 3-year, multi-informant study examined whether youths' perceptions of parental privacy invasion...
Recent research has identified adolescent disclosure to parents as a powerful predictor of adolescen...
A 2-wave survey study among 1173 10-14-year-olds tested the longitudinal contribution of secrecy fro...
Contains fulltext : 55705.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A 2-wave surve...
Traditional views regard secrecy as problematic, and associated research among adults almost ex-clus...
Increasing bodies of evidence suggest that keeping secrets may be detrimental to well-being and adju...
Traditional views regard secrecy as problematic, and associated research among adults almost exclusi...
Adolescent disclosure to parents has been associated with a variety of positive adolescent outcomes....
The current longitudinal study examined adolescent gender differences in the developmental changes a...
It is a household notion that secrecy is bad while sharing is good. But what about shared secrets? T...
ObjectivesThis study examined (a) associations of parent-adolescent relationship characteristics and...
This 3-year, multi-informant study examined whether youths’ perceptions of parental privacy invasion...
Adolescents' secrecy is intertwined with perception of parents' behaviors as acts of privacy invasio...
Adolescents' secrecy is intertwined with perception of parents' behaviors as acts of privacy invasio...
Juvenile offending is a wide-spread problem in Western societies: More than half of the adolescents ...
This 3-year, multi-informant study examined whether youths' perceptions of parental privacy invasion...