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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Oct 1.
Published in final edited form as: Emotion. 2012 Mar 5;12(5):932–942. doi: 10.1037/a0027148

Table 2.

Correlations Between Parent Negative Emotionality, Child Negative Emotionality and Child Behaviors

Mother Negative
Emotionality (BFI
Neuroticism)
Father Negative
Emotionality (BFI
Neuroticism)
Child Negative
Emotionality (CBQ:
Maternal-rated)
Child Negative
Emotionality (CBQ:
Paternal-rated)
Child Behaviors Time 1 Time 2 Time 1 Time 2 Time 1 Time 2 Time 1 Time 2
Child EAR Behaviors
   Arguing/fighting with others .20 .52** .07 −.09 .29 .42* −.09 .37*
   Crying −.04 −.07 .32 −.26 .12 −.01 −.02 −.15
   Whining −.06 .17 .41* .01 .00 .32 −.16 .29
Child Word Use
   Negative emotion words .39* .14 −.11 .08 .22 −.03 −.13 −.01

Note.

**

p < .01,

*

p < .05,

p < .07, two-tailed.

Time 1 reflects measurement of child behavior at baseline; Time 2 reflects changes in child behavior from Time 1 to Time 2 (residualized Time 2 child behavior at 1-yr follow-up controlling for Time 1 child behavior). Child EAR behaviors and negative emotion words were log-transformed prior to analyses.