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Family members' unique perspectives of the family: examining their scope, size, and relations to individual adjustment
Authors:Jager Justin  Bornstein Marc H  Putnick Diane L  Hendricks Charlene
Affiliation:Child and Family Research Section, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development, 6705 Rockledge Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. jagerjo@mail.nih.gov
Abstract:Using the McMaster Family Assessment Device (Epstein, Baldwin, & Bishop, 1983) and incorporating the perspectives of adolescent, mother, and father, this study examined each family member's "unique perspective" or nonshared, idiosyncratic view of the family. We used a modified multitrait-multimethod confirmatory factor analysis that (a) isolated for each family member's 6 reports of family dysfunction the nonshared variance (a combination of variance idiosyncratic to the individual and measurement error) from variance shared by 1 or more family members and (b) extracted common variance across each family member's set of nonshared variances. The sample included 128 families from a U.S. East Coast metropolitan area. Each family member's unique perspective generalized across his or her different reports of family dysfunction and accounted for a sizable proportion of his or her own variance in reports of family dysfunction. In addition, after holding level of dysfunction constant across families and controlling for a family's shared variance (agreement regarding family dysfunction), each family member's unique perspective was associated with his or her own adjustment. Future applications and competing alternatives for what these "unique perspectives" reflect about the family are discussed.
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