Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life Satisfaction

Love is a fundamental part of psychological well-adjustment, but a gap in the literature exists surrounding how perceptions of how loved adults felt by their biological parents in childhood can contribute to life satisfaction and psychological adjustment. This study aims to fill that gap by examinin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kaitlyn Kidder, Alan R. King
Format: Article
Language:Indonesian
Published: Program Studi Psikologi Fakultas Kedokteran Universiitas Andalas 2022-08-01
Series:Jurnal Ilmu Perilaku
Online Access:http://jip.fk.unand.ac.id/index.php/jip/article/view/390
_version_ 1797449265296965632
author Kaitlyn Kidder
Alan R. King
author_facet Kaitlyn Kidder
Alan R. King
author_sort Kaitlyn Kidder
collection DOAJ
description Love is a fundamental part of psychological well-adjustment, but a gap in the literature exists surrounding how perceptions of how loved adults felt by their biological parents in childhood can contribute to life satisfaction and psychological adjustment. This study aims to fill that gap by examining the impact of feeling loved by biological parents and grandparents on psychological well-being and adjustment factors later in life. 1,189 college-aged participants volunteered for the study and were recruited online via SONA at a university in the United States. We constructed a Likert-style rating scale to measure individuals’ level of perceived love (LUV) and its contribution to various adjustment indicators, including life satisfaction, depression, anxiety, trait anger, and conduct disturbance. Linear regression models and bivariate correlations were calculated for the predictor and maladjustment indicators. Results showed a modest correlation between the LUV index and life satisfaction as well as other maladjustment indicators and revealed that LUV significantly predicted life satisfaction. LUV was also a significant predictor of depression, anxiety, anger, and conduct disturbance. These results suggest that perceived love could be an important resilience factor and could be used to predict life satisfaction and psychological adjustment later in life.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T14:23:25Z
format Article
id doaj.art-2cf4c9ee0c284c748dedec3879b64b87
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2581-0421
language Indonesian
last_indexed 2024-03-09T14:23:25Z
publishDate 2022-08-01
publisher Program Studi Psikologi Fakultas Kedokteran Universiitas Andalas
record_format Article
series Jurnal Ilmu Perilaku
spelling doaj.art-2cf4c9ee0c284c748dedec3879b64b872023-11-28T07:51:24ZindProgram Studi Psikologi Fakultas Kedokteran Universiitas AndalasJurnal Ilmu Perilaku2581-04212022-08-016112110.25077/jip.6.1.1-21.2022390Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life SatisfactionKaitlyn Kidder0Alan R. King1University of North DakotaUniversity of North DakotaLove is a fundamental part of psychological well-adjustment, but a gap in the literature exists surrounding how perceptions of how loved adults felt by their biological parents in childhood can contribute to life satisfaction and psychological adjustment. This study aims to fill that gap by examining the impact of feeling loved by biological parents and grandparents on psychological well-being and adjustment factors later in life. 1,189 college-aged participants volunteered for the study and were recruited online via SONA at a university in the United States. We constructed a Likert-style rating scale to measure individuals’ level of perceived love (LUV) and its contribution to various adjustment indicators, including life satisfaction, depression, anxiety, trait anger, and conduct disturbance. Linear regression models and bivariate correlations were calculated for the predictor and maladjustment indicators. Results showed a modest correlation between the LUV index and life satisfaction as well as other maladjustment indicators and revealed that LUV significantly predicted life satisfaction. LUV was also a significant predictor of depression, anxiety, anger, and conduct disturbance. These results suggest that perceived love could be an important resilience factor and could be used to predict life satisfaction and psychological adjustment later in life.http://jip.fk.unand.ac.id/index.php/jip/article/view/390
spellingShingle Kaitlyn Kidder
Alan R. King
Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life Satisfaction
Jurnal Ilmu Perilaku
title Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life Satisfaction
title_full Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life Satisfaction
title_fullStr Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life Satisfaction
title_full_unstemmed Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life Satisfaction
title_short Perception of Parental Love as a Predictor of Children's Life Satisfaction
title_sort perception of parental love as a predictor of children s life satisfaction
url http://jip.fk.unand.ac.id/index.php/jip/article/view/390
work_keys_str_mv AT kaitlynkidder perceptionofparentalloveasapredictorofchildrenslifesatisfaction
AT alanrking perceptionofparentalloveasapredictorofchildrenslifesatisfaction