![]() ![]() Puberty meta-analyses revealed only a positive linear association between conflict affect and pubertal maturation. In age meta-analyses, conflict rate and total conflict decline from early adolescence to mid-adolescence and from mid-adolescence to late adolescence conflict affect increases from early adolescence to mid-adolescence. Two diverging sets of linear effects emerged, one indicating a decline in conflict rate and total conflict with age and the other indicating an increase in conflict affect with both age and pubertal maturation. The results provide little support for the commonly held view that parent-child conflict rises and then falls across adolescence, although conclusions regarding pubertal change as well as conflict affect are qualified by the limited number of studies available. Three types of parent-adolescent conflict are examined: conflict rate, conflict affect, and total conflict (rate and affect combined). ![]() The meta-analyses summarize results from studies of change in parent-child conflict as a function of either adolescent age or pubertal maturation. A series of meta-analyses addresses whether and how parent-child conflict changes during adolescence and factors that moderate patterns of change. ![]()
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