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The effectiveness of knowledge mobilization on parent emotion beliefs is moderated by parent gender, dysregulation, and family expressiveness.

Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science / Revue canadienne des sciences du comportement, Vol 56(1), Jan 2024, 1-9; doi:10.1037/cbs0000338

We tested the effectiveness of mobilizing research findings from a study on parental beliefs about gender and emotion directly to parent stakeholders and examined parent gender, parent emotion dysregulation, and family expressiveness as moderators of belief change pre-to-post knowledge mobilization. A sample of 936 parents of children aged 8–12 completed measures about gendered emotion beliefs, emotion dysregulation, and family expressiveness and was then randomized to watch either a short, animated knowledge mobilization (KMb) video or a control video. KMb effectiveness was moderated by parent gender, such that gendered beliefs decreased significantly more in the KMb condition for fathers but not for mothers. Results also revealed a larger decrease in gendered emotion beliefs post-KMb video for parents who initially endorsed low levels of dysregulation and family emotion expressiveness. Implications for informing future KMb efforts and tailoring such efforts based on the heterogeneity of the targeted audience are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 02/23/2024 | Link to this post on IFP |
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