1. Predicting the use of corporal punishment: Child aggression, parent religiosity, and the BDNF gene
- Author
-
Maayan Davidov, Ariel Knafo-Noam, David Mankuta, and Reut Avinun
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Religion and Psychology ,Poison control ,Mothers ,Suicide prevention ,Developmental psychology ,Religiosity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fathers ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Punishment ,Intervention (counseling) ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,General Psychology ,Parenting ,Aggression ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,medicine.disease ,Female ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Corporal punishment ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Corporal punishment (CP) has been associated with deleterious child outcomes, highlighting the importance of understanding its underpinnings. Although several factors have been linked with parents' CP use, genetic influences on CP have rarely been studied, and an integrative view examining the interplay between different predictors of CP is missing. We focused on the separate and joint effects of religiosity, child aggression, parent's gender, and a valine (Val) to methionine (Met) substitution in the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) gene. Data came from a twin sample (51% male, aged 6.5 years). We used mothers' and fathers' self-reports of CP and religiosity, and the other parent's report on child aggression. Complete data were available for 244 mothers and their 466 children, and for 217 fathers and their 409 children. The random split method was employed to examine replicability. For mothers, only the effect of religiosity appeared to replicate. For fathers, several effects predicting CP use replicated in both samples: child aggression, child sex, religiosity, and a three-way (GxExE) interaction implicating fathers' BDNF genotype, child aggression and religiosity. Religious fathers who carried the Met allele and had an aggressive child used CP more frequently; in contrast, secular fathers' CP use was not affected by their BDNF genotype or child aggression. Results were also repeated longitudinally in a subsample with age 8-9 data. Findings highlight the utility of a bio-ecological approach for studying CP use by shedding light on pertinent gene-environment interaction processes. Possible implications for intervention and public policy are discussed.
- Published
- 2017