Yun Wang
Beijing Normal University
7 Papers
Yun Wang is an academic researcher from Beijing Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anger & Parenting styles. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Chinese children's effortful control and dispositional anger/frustration: relations to parenting styles and children's social functioning.
TL;DR: Authoritarian parenting was associated with children's low effortful control and high dispositional anger/frustration, which mediated the negative relation between authoritarian parenting and children's social functioning.
275
Parental reactions to children's negative emotions: prospective relations to Chinese children's psychological adjustment.
Annie Tao,Qing Zhou,Yun Wang +2 more
TL;DR: The prospective relations between five types of parental reactions to children's negative emotions (PRCNE) and children's psychological adjustment (behavioral problems and social competence) were examined in a two-wave longitudinal study of 425 school-age children in China.
130
Relations of parenting and temperament to Chinese children's experience of negative life events, coping efficacy, and externalizing problems.
TL;DR: There is some cross-cultural universality in the developmental pathways for externalizing problems in native Chinese children, and the relation between authoritarian parenting and externalizing was mediated by children's coping efficacy and negative school events.
The Relations of Temperament Reactivity and Effortful Control to Children’s Adjustment Problems in China and the United States
TL;DR: The relations of parents' and teachers' reports of temperament anger-irritability, positive emotionality, and effortful control to children's externalizing and internalizing problems were examined and suggest that there are considerable cross-cultural similarities in the temperament-adjustment associations.
Predicting Internalizing Problems in Chinese Children: the Unique and Interactive Effects of Parenting and Child Temperament
TL;DR: The findings suggest that (a) children with low effortful control may be particularly susceptible to the adverse effect of authoritarian parenting and (b) the benefit of authoritative parenting may be especially important for children with high anger/frustration.