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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Oct 1.
Published in final edited form as: Dev Psychol. 2018 Oct;54(10):1881–1890. doi: 10.1037/dev0000565

Table 2.

Correlations among transaction study variables

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Age 9
1. Parental Age .70*** .27*** .16*** .11*** .16*** .13*** .11*** .08*
2. Parental Education .19*** .74*** .10*** .08** .08** .10*** .07* .08**
3. Acceptance-Rejection .09** .05 .45*** .27*** .69*** .31*** .61*** .20***
4. Prosocial Behavior .09** .05 .23*** -- .26*** .52*** .14*** .29***
Age 10
5. Acceptance-Rejection .08* .03 .65*** .24*** .47*** .27*** .59*** .19***
6. Prosocial Behavior .15*** .07* .25*** .52*** 24*** -- .21*** .38***
Age 12
7. Acceptance-Rejection .09* .00 .57*** .13*** .52*** .18*** .37*** .18***
8. Prosocial Behavior .06 .05 .17*** .29*** .17*** .36*** .21*** --

Note. Mothers’ intercorrelations are above and fathers’ intercorrelations are below the diagonal. Correlations between comparable mother and father variables are italicized in shaded cells on the diagonal. Bolded correlations in shaded cells in off-diagonals are stabilities of the same construct over time.

*

p<.05.

**

p<.01.

***

p<.001.