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Communication Processes that Mediate Parents’ Nonaccommodation and Their Sexual Minority Children’s Mental Well-being
Makenna Decker, Haley
Makenna Decker, Haley
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2021
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Abstract
Using communication accommodation theory (CAT) and the communication theory of identity (CTI), this study investigated (a) the degree to which parents’ nonaccommodation is associated with sexual minority (SM) adult children’s surface acting and topic avoidance, (b) the degree to which these communicative responses are associated with their mental health, (c) the degree to which surface acting and topic avoidance explain the association between parents’ nonaccommodation and the SM’s mental health, and (d) the degree to which identity gaps moderate these indirect effects. Results from 219 participants who completed online surveys supported most of the reasoning advanced in the study. Parents’ nonaccommodation was positively associated with mental health symptoms, surface acting, and topic avoidance, and the results demonstrated a stronger mediation effect for surface acting than for topic avoidance. However, identity gaps did not moderate this mediated process. The results extend CAT and CTI and offer valuable insight into family communication experiences for SMs.
Contents
Subject
Communication
communication accommodation theory
emotion labor
family communication
identity gap
sexual minority
topic avoidance
communication accommodation theory
emotion labor
family communication
identity gap
sexual minority
topic avoidance
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Communication Studies