Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community

Abstract Background Previous studies reported that subjective well-being in adulthood correlates with perceived parental bonding in childhood as well as personality traits. However, whether personality traits mediate the effect of perceived parental bonding on well-being or not has not been reported...

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Main Authors: Akiko Murakoshi, Nobuyuki Mitsui, Jiro Masuya, Yota Fujimura, Shinji Higashi, Ichiro Kusumi, Takeshi Inoue
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:BioPsychoSocial Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13030-020-00198-4
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spelling doaj-a7c46cebb46f489a835b8e8b95ba1b8d2020-11-25T03:43:27ZengBMCBioPsychoSocial Medicine1751-07592020-10-011411910.1186/s13030-020-00198-4Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the communityAkiko Murakoshi0Nobuyuki Mitsui1Jiro Masuya2Yota Fujimura3Shinji Higashi4Ichiro Kusumi5Takeshi Inoue6Department of Psychiatry, Tokyo Medical UniversityDepartment of Psychiatry, Hokkaido University Graduate School of MedicineDepartment of Psychiatry, Tokyo Medical UniversityDepartment of Psychiatry, Tokyo Medical UniversityDepartment of Psychiatry, Tokyo Medical UniversityDepartment of Psychiatry, Hokkaido University Graduate School of MedicineDepartment of Psychiatry, Tokyo Medical UniversityAbstract Background Previous studies reported that subjective well-being in adulthood correlates with perceived parental bonding in childhood as well as personality traits. However, whether personality traits mediate the effect of perceived parental bonding on well-being or not has not been reported to date. In this study, we hypothesized that ‘parental care and overprotection’ in childhood affect ‘well-being’ in adulthood through various ‘personality traits’, and analyzed this using structural equation modeling. Methods A total of 402 adult volunteers from the community provided responses to the following questionnaires: 1) Parental Bonding Instrument, 2) Temperament and Character Inventory, and 3) The Subjective Well-being Inventory. Two structural equation models were designed and the maximum likelihood estimation method was used for covariance structure analysis. Results Parental care in childhood directly increased well-being in adulthood and indirectly increased it through personality traits (harm avoidance, reward dependence, and self-directedness). Parental overprotection in childhood had no direct effect on well-being in adulthood but decreased well-being in adulthood indirectly through personality traits (harm avoidance, reward dependence, and self-directedness) and increased it through one personality trait (self-transcendence). Conclusions This study showed that the influences of perceived parental bonding on well-being in adulthood are mediated by self-directedness, harm avoidance, reward dependence, and self-transcendence among the seven personality dimensions evaluated by the Temperament and Character Inventory.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13030-020-00198-4Subjective well-beingQuality of parentingTemperament and character inventoryStructural equation modelCovariance structure analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Akiko Murakoshi
Nobuyuki Mitsui
Jiro Masuya
Yota Fujimura
Shinji Higashi
Ichiro Kusumi
Takeshi Inoue
spellingShingle Akiko Murakoshi
Nobuyuki Mitsui
Jiro Masuya
Yota Fujimura
Shinji Higashi
Ichiro Kusumi
Takeshi Inoue
Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community
BioPsychoSocial Medicine
Subjective well-being
Quality of parenting
Temperament and character inventory
Structural equation model
Covariance structure analysis
author_facet Akiko Murakoshi
Nobuyuki Mitsui
Jiro Masuya
Yota Fujimura
Shinji Higashi
Ichiro Kusumi
Takeshi Inoue
author_sort Akiko Murakoshi
title Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community
title_short Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community
title_full Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community
title_fullStr Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community
title_full_unstemmed Personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community
title_sort personality traits mediate the association between perceived parental bonding and well-being in adult volunteers from the community
publisher BMC
series BioPsychoSocial Medicine
issn 1751-0759
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background Previous studies reported that subjective well-being in adulthood correlates with perceived parental bonding in childhood as well as personality traits. However, whether personality traits mediate the effect of perceived parental bonding on well-being or not has not been reported to date. In this study, we hypothesized that ‘parental care and overprotection’ in childhood affect ‘well-being’ in adulthood through various ‘personality traits’, and analyzed this using structural equation modeling. Methods A total of 402 adult volunteers from the community provided responses to the following questionnaires: 1) Parental Bonding Instrument, 2) Temperament and Character Inventory, and 3) The Subjective Well-being Inventory. Two structural equation models were designed and the maximum likelihood estimation method was used for covariance structure analysis. Results Parental care in childhood directly increased well-being in adulthood and indirectly increased it through personality traits (harm avoidance, reward dependence, and self-directedness). Parental overprotection in childhood had no direct effect on well-being in adulthood but decreased well-being in adulthood indirectly through personality traits (harm avoidance, reward dependence, and self-directedness) and increased it through one personality trait (self-transcendence). Conclusions This study showed that the influences of perceived parental bonding on well-being in adulthood are mediated by self-directedness, harm avoidance, reward dependence, and self-transcendence among the seven personality dimensions evaluated by the Temperament and Character Inventory.
topic Subjective well-being
Quality of parenting
Temperament and character inventory
Structural equation model
Covariance structure analysis
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13030-020-00198-4
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