“…Roe (1957) hypothesized that people who were brought up in a family atmosphere that was warm, attentive (if not overprotective), and child-centered, would prefer social service vocations, whereas those brought up in a cold, non-child-oriented family would prefer non-person-type vocations (e.g., science or technology). Although not all the research confirms Roe's hypothesis (e.g., Grigg, 1959;Switzer, Grigg, Miller, & Young, 1962), some research does (e.g., Hagen, 1960;Utton, 1962). Nachmann (1960) found that lawyers and dentists tend to have a father-dominated, impulse-repressing family, whereas those in social work tend to come from mother-dominated, impulse-channeling families, families in which the children are taught concern for human suffering.…”