1. Executive Control in Early Childhood as an Antecedent of Adolescent Problem Behaviors: A Longitudinal Study with Performance-based Measures of Early Childhood Cognitive Processes
- Author
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Jennifer Mize Nelson, Charles B. Fleming, Irina Patwardhan, Kimberly Andrews Espy, Tiffany D. James, Timothy D. Nelson, Marla Vivero, W. Alex Mason, and Amy L. Stevens
- Subjects
Male ,Longitudinal study ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,Control (management) ,050109 social psychology ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Article ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Executive Function ,Cognition ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,Early childhood ,Risk factor ,Child ,Problem Behavior ,05 social sciences ,Legal psychology ,Health psychology ,Antecedent (behavioral psychology) ,Adolescent Behavior ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Identifying childhood cognitive processes that predict adolescent problem behaviors can help guide understanding and prevention of these behaviors. In a community sample of 313 youth recruited in a small Midwestern city between 2006 and 2012 (49% male, 64% European American), executive control and foundational cognitive abilities were assessed at age 5 in a lab setting with performance-based measures. In adolescence, youth provided self-report of problem behaviors in surveys administered annually between ages 14 and 16. Executive control was negatively associated with externalizing behavior problems and adolescents getting in trouble at school, accounting for foundational cognitive abilities and family background covariates. Executive control had negative, but nonsignificant, associations with internalizing problems and substance use initiation. The findings point to deficits in executive control as a childhood risk factor for later problems and a potential target for preventive interventions.
- Published
- 2020
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