Identifying Cultural Patterns in Parenting Beliefs Through Clustering Algorithms
Keywords:
Parenting beliefs, cultural patterns, clustering algorithms, machine learning, autonomy support, collectivism, cross-cultural psychologyAbstract
Objective: The present study aimed to identify latent cultural patterns in parenting beliefs by applying clustering algorithms to multidimensional data on parental attitudes and cultural orientations.
Methods and Materials: This study employed a quantitative, cross-sectional design with a data-driven analytical approach. The sample consisted of 412 parents from Georgia, selected through stratified random sampling to ensure representation across demographic strata. Data were collected using standardized instruments assessing parenting beliefs, including dimensions such as parental authority, autonomy support, emotional socialization, and behavioral control, alongside cultural orientation constructs such as collectivism, individualism, power distance, and uncertainty avoidance. After data preprocessing, clustering analyses were conducted using K-means and hierarchical methods. The optimal number of clusters was determined using the Elbow method, Silhouette coefficient, and Davies–Bouldin index. Principal component analysis (PCA) was also employed to enhance interpretability and visualize cluster separation. Statistical preprocessing and descriptive analyses were performed using IBM SPSS, while machine learning analyses were implemented in Python.
Findings: Clustering results revealed a statistically meaningful three-cluster solution with acceptable validity indices (Silhouette = 0.53; Davies–Bouldin = 0.81), indicating moderate-to-strong separation between clusters. The first cluster demonstrated significantly higher levels of parental authority, behavioral control, and collectivist orientation, reflecting a traditional-authoritarian profile. The second cluster exhibited significantly higher autonomy support, emotional socialization, and individualism, representing an autonomy-supportive profile. The third cluster showed moderate levels across all variables, indicating a hybrid or integrative parenting belief pattern. Principal component analysis confirmed clear spatial differentiation among clusters, supporting the robustness and interpretability of the classification model.
Conclusion: The findings demonstrate that parenting beliefs are structured into distinct cultural profiles that reflect varying combinations of authority, autonomy, and cultural orientation. The identification of traditional, autonomy-supportive, and hybrid parenting patterns highlights the complexity and heterogeneity of parenting beliefs within a single cultural context. These results underscore the value of machine learning approaches in uncovering latent cultural structures and provide a foundation for culturally informed research and intervention in family and developmental studies.
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