33 results on '"LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT"'
Search Results
2. Self-reported and general practitioner recorded indicators of lifetime health up to age 48 according to offender type in the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development.
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Skinner, Guy C. M. and Farrington, David P.
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MENTAL health services , *GENERAL practitioners , *HEALTH status indicators , *PRIMARY care , *LIFE course approach , *CRIMINALS , *SELF-evaluation , *RESEARCH funding , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Previous research has suggested that people with a history of offending have worse health compared to non-offenders, but it is less clear whether all types of offenders are at similar health risks. In a New Zealand birth cohort study, Moffitt evidenced three main offending trajectories-life-course-persistent (LCP), adolescence-limited (AL) and late-onset (LO) offending, subsequently confirmed in other substantial longitudinal studies.Aims: Our aim was to explore the relationship between these offending trajectories and both self-reported (SR) and general practitioner (GP) (primary care) recorded health indicators.Methods: Self-reported medical data at age 48 were obtained for 394 men followed since age 8 years in the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development. In addition, medical records were obtained from GPs for 264 of them. Health indicators from both sources were compared between each of the three established trajectories of offenders across the life course-LCP, AL, LO and the non-offenders.Results: LCP offenders were found to have over twice the likelihood of disabling medical conditions according to both self-report and GP records. They were also more likely to have GP records indicating mental health problems and treatment for them. According to GP records alone, the LO offenders were also more likely to have mental health problems. The health of AL offenders appeared to be no different from that of the crime-free controls.Conclusions: Our findings add weight to the growing evidence that LCP offending and offending that only occurs relatively late in life are likely to be the indicators of generally unhealthy and disrupted lives. This suggests that if lifestyle is to change for the better, interventions are likely to be needed for health as well as antisocial behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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3. Does debt increase risk?: A mixed methods approach to studying the potential underlying risk factors in the relationship between debt and crime
- Author
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Van Beek, Gercoline, De Vogel, Vivienne, Leenders, Roger, van de Mheen, Dike, Van Beek, Gercoline, De Vogel, Vivienne, Leenders, Roger, and van de Mheen, Dike
- Abstract
Previous studies have found evidence for a relationship between debt and crime, and for problems in childhood, education, work, and mental and physical health as underlying risk factors. However, insight into the interplay between these possible risk factors is limited. Therefore, a mixed methods approach was applied by both creating a quantitative Gaussian Graphical Model (GGM) and conducting qualitative analyses on 250 client files including risk assessment data from the Dutch probation service, to gain more specific insight into the interaction between potential risk factors. The results show that debt is strongly related to criminal behavior and problems in many life domains for most probation clients. Debt seems to be a direct risk factor for crime, but debt and crime also appear to be highly interrelated as part of a complex interplay of risk factors. The most frequently rated factors – limited or incomplete education, no job and related lack of income, and mental and physical health problems – are highly interwoven and increase the risk of both debt and crime. The findings stress the importance of paying attention to and using interventions focusing on strongly related crime risk factors, including debt, and their complex interplay, to supervise probation clients effectively.
- Published
- 2023
4. Does debt increase risk?: A mixed methods approach to studying the potential underlying risk factors in the relationship between debt and crime
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Gercoline van Beek, Vivienne de Vogel, Roger Leenders, Dike van de Mheen, Verslaving, Tranzo, Scientific center for care and wellbeing, and Data Analytics
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mixed methods ,education ,humanities ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,probation ,ONSET ,risk factors ,Financial problems ,HEALTH ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,debt ,Law ,General Psychology ,health care economics and organizations ,crime - Abstract
Previous studies have found evidence for a relationship between debt and crime, and for problems in childhood, education, work, and mental and physical health as underlying risk factors. However, insight into the interplay between these possible risk factors is limited. Therefore, a mixed methods approach was applied by both creating a quantitative Gaussian Graphical Model (GGM) and conducting qualitative analyses on 250 client files including risk assessment data from the Dutch probation service, to gain more specific insight into the interaction between potential risk factors. The results show that debt is strongly related to criminal behavior and problems in many life domains for most probation clients. Debt seems to be a direct risk factor for crime, but debt and crime also appear to be highly interrelated as part of a complex interplay of risk factors. The most frequently rated factors – limited or incomplete education, no job and related lack of income, and mental and physical health problems – are highly interwoven and increase the risk of both debt and crime. The findings stress the importance of paying attention to and using interventions focusing on strongly related crime risk factors, including debt, and their complex interplay, to supervise probation clients effectively.
- Published
- 2023
5. The impact of a brief RNR-based training on Turkish juvenile probation officers' punitive and rehabilitative attitudes and recidivism risk perceptions
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Ayse E. Tuncer, Corine de Ruiter, Gizem Erdem, Section Forensic Psychology, RS: FPN CPS IV, Ersayan, Ayşe Esra (ORCID 0000-0003-0323-4569 & YÖK ID 178452), Erdem, Gizem (ORCID 0000-0003-3507-1290 & YÖK ID 222027), Ruiter, Corine, College of Social Sciences and Humanities, and Department of Psychology
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Adult ,Male ,Social Psychology ,Adolescent ,Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Turkey ,rehabilitative attitudes ,Turkish ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Punitive damages ,050109 social psychology ,Pilot Projects ,recidivism risk perception ,Risk Assessment ,OFFENDERS ,Law Enforcement ,Perception ,Juvenile ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Research Articles ,METAANALYSIS ,media_common ,Juvenile probation officers ,Punitive attitudes ,Recidivism risk perception ,Rehabilitative Attitudes ,Risk-need-responsivity model ,Recidivism ,punitive attitudes ,05 social sciences ,SUPERVISION ,Public, environmental and occupational health ,Psychology, multidisciplinary ,Social work ,language.human_language ,YOUTH ,Life course persistent ,language ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Female ,risk‐need‐responsivity model ,juvenile probation officers ,TRAJECTORIES ,Training program ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Program Evaluation ,Research Article ,risk-need-responsivity model - Abstract
The present quasi-experimental study examined the impact of a brief training program based on the risk–need–responsivity (RNR) model on Turkish juvenile probation officers' (JPOs) punitive and rehabilitative attitudes toward justice-involved youth and recidivism risk perceptions. Fifty-nine JPOs were recruited through three probation offices in Istanbul, Turkey. Thirty-six JPOs, who received a 1-day training in the RNR model of offending behavior, were compared to JPOs in a wait-list control condition (n = 23). Participants in both conditions completed surveys at baseline and 1-week posttraining. Mixed-factorial analysis of variances revealed a significantly higher decrease in JPOs' punitive attitudes from pre- to posttest, in the training condition compared to the control group, with a medium effect size. Rehabilitative attitudes decreased in both conditions, while recidivism risk perceptions did not change from pre- to posttest in either condition. Future research could expand on these promising results using a more intensive training program and a randomized-controlled design in a larger sample of JPOs., NA
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- 2020
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6. Determinants of Persistence in Collective Violence Offending
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Henk Ferwerda, Theo A. H. Doreleijers, Arjan Blokland, Tom van Ham, Otto Adang, and Social Psychology
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Persistence (psychology) ,INFORMATION ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,WILLINGNESS ,Sample (statistics) ,SOCIAL IDENTITY MODEL ,CATEGORY CONSTRUCTIONS ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,CROWD ,IDENTIFICATION ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,ESCALATE ,Clinical Psychology ,Increased risk ,ADOLESCENCE ,Life course persistent ,Identification (biology) ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Law ,BEHAVIOR ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Demography - Abstract
This study explores individual characteristics linked to an increased risk of persistence in collective violence. A sample of collective violence offenders (n = 438) was identified based on individuals' involvement in a collective violence incident in 2011/2012 or due to them being recorded in a police database of 'known' football hooligans. For the current analyses, persistence was defined as recidivism to collective violence assessed over a 4- to 5-year time span. Criminal career data were obtained from the police (register data). Individual characteristics concerned criminal career measures, behavioral indicators of personality traits and childhood problematic behavior. Due to a lack of other available data sources, behavioral indicator data were largely obtained from police and probation service information. The results of this study indicate that offender characteristics can be linked to persistence in collective violence. Results contrast currently dominant theoretical perspectives on the etiology of collective violence. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
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- 2019
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7. The relationship between debt and crime
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Dike van de Mheen, Vivienne de Vogel, Gercoline van Beek, Verslaving, and Tranzo, Scientific center for care and wellbeing
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STRAIN ,media_common.quotation_subject ,debts ,Monetary economics ,Social class ,criminal behavior ,Debt ,WELFARE-STATE ,Economics ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,debt ,financial problems ,0505 law ,media_common ,MYTH ,SOCIAL-CLASS ,crime ,crime, criminal behavior, debt, debts, financial problems ,05 social sciences ,Welfare state ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,Criminal behavior ,YOUTH ,ADOLESCENCE ,Life course persistent ,ONSET ,050501 criminology ,RISK-FACTORS ,Law ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Compared to macroeconomic factors, the financial situation of the individual may provide better insight into the relationship between debt and crime. However, the relationship between debt and crime is still unclear and little is known about the causality of this relationship and the factors that influence it. To obtain more insight into this relationship, a systematic and scoping literature review was conducted. Five articles were analyzed in the systematic review, and 24 articles in the scoping review. The results of the systematic review show a strong association between debt and crime whereby debt is a risk factor for crime, especially for recidivism and regardless of the type of crime, and crime is a risk factor for debt. The scoping review provided additional and in-depth insight, and placed the results of the systematic review in a broader perspective. Moreover, it emphasized the prevalence of debt among offenders, regardless of age, and identified the factors that influence the relationship between debt and crime.
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- 2020
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8. Characteristics of Adolescent Psychiatric Inpatients with Early-Onset and Adolescent-Onset Disruptive Behavior.
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de Boer, SjoukjeB.B., Boon, AlbertE., Verheij, Fop, and Donker, MarianneC. H.
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ADOLESCENT psychiatric nursing , *INPATIENT care , *MEDICAL care , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *ADOLESCENT psychiatry , *JUVENILE delinquency , *DELINQUENT behavior - Abstract
The main aim of this study was to identify factors that diagnosticians in clinical practice can use to differentiate between adolescents on the life-course-persistent and adolescence-limited pathways of antisocial behavior. In epidemiological research these subtypes could not be distinguished based on their disruptive behavior. Because this differentiation is important for choice of treatment for adolescent psychiatric inpatients with severe disruptive behavior, the purpose of the present study was to identify easily measurable characteristics present in adolescence that are associated with the pathways. Male and female adolescent psychiatric inpatients were divided into either early-onset (EO) (n = 134) or adolescent-onset (AO) (n = 69) disruptive behavior, based on the age at which professional care was required for disruptive behavior, referral to special education occurred, or criminal offences were first committed. The groups differed on several characteristics. No gender differences were found in these characteristics. Logistic regression analysis indicated that males with a history of physical abuse, who were referred by a youth care facility had the highest probability of being member of the EO group. These characteristics are reasonably easy to identify, may apply to other clinical samples as well, and may help clinicians to target their treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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9. The Latent Structure of Life-Course-Persistent Antisocial Behavior: Is Moffitt's Developmental Taxonomy a True Taxonomy?
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Walters, Glenn D.
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DELINQUENT behavior , *SOCIAL indicators , *NUMERICAL taxonomy , *NURSING assessment , *LONGITUDINAL method , *HYPERACTIVE children , *STATISTICAL correlation , *FACTOR analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine whether life-course-persistent (LCP) and adolescence-limited (AL) antisocial behavior form distinct categories or lie along a common dimension. Method: Taxometric analyses were performed on 2,175 men and women from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-Child Data (Center for Human Resource Research, 2009) with at least I self-reported delinquent act. The 3 externalizing factor scales from the parent-rated Behavior Problems Index (Peterson & Zill, 1986)-Antisocial, Headstrong, and Hyperactive-served as indicators in an investigation into the latent structure of LCP and AL antisocial behavior. Results: All 3 taxometric procedures included in this study-mean above minus below a cut, maximum covariance, and latent mode factor analysis- produced results consistent with the conclusion that the latent structure of LCP and AL antisocial behavior is dimensional in nature. Conclusion: From a conceptual standpoint, the results of this study suggest that LCP and AL antisocial behavior differ in degree (quantitative difference) rather than in kind (qualitative difference). These results have potentially important implications for theory development as well as for clinical assessment, diagnosis, and intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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10. The Lasting Effects of Marijuana Use on Educational Attainment in Midlife.
- Author
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Ryan, Andrea Kay
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MARIJUANA abuse , *ACADEMIC achievement , *LABOR market , *MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
Data from the NLSY79, a U.S. nationally representative longitudinal survey of labor market behavior, sponsored and directed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor, was used to assess the influence of marijuana use on educational attainment (N = 7,724). Multivariate nested OLS models assessed the associations of marijuana use in 1979, 1984, and 1998 with educational attainment in 2002. Adolescent, frequent, and persistent users experienced lower attainment at ages 37 to 45 than nonusers even when use was confined to adolescence. Implications of the findings, limitations of the study, and suggestions for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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11. The Effects of Prenatal Problems, Family Functioning, and Neighborhood Disadvantage in Predicting Life-Course-Persistent Offending.
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Turner, Michael G., Hartman, Jennifer L., and Bishop, Donna M.
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Research examining Moffitt's dual taxonomy theory of offending has generally supported the idea that neuropsychological deficits interact with disadvantaged familial environments to predict life-course-persistent offending. Most research, however, has neglected to investigate the power of this interaction across different neighborhood and racial contexts. Using data extracted from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, Moffitt's biosocial hypothesis is tested across different neighborhood and racial contexts. The findings indicate that the biosocial interaction predicts life-course-persistent offending only among non-Whites in disadvantaged neighborhoods. Stated differently, macro-level structural factors appear to moderate the effects of individual and family risks. That poor non-Whites reside in neighborhoods that are ecologically distinct from those in which poor Whites reside exacerbates the criminogenic effects of individual-level deficits and family disadvantage. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2007
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12. Exploring a new structured professional judgment measure (impulsivity measure related to violence) after an average follow-up of 10 years : A study of Finnish offenders
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Christopher D. Webster, Ghitta Weizmann-Henelius, Markku Eronen, Teija Rissanen, Hanna Putkonen, Department of Psychiatry, Clinicum, and HUS Psychiatry
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Predictive validity ,Adult ,Male ,DISORDERS ,Poison control ,Impulsivity ,Suicide prevention ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Judgment ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Risk management ,Finland ,0505 law ,Recidivism ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,General Medicine ,Original Articles ,Criminals ,16. Peace & justice ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Impulsive Behavior ,050501 criminology ,Original Article ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,medicine.symptom ,Risk assessment ,Psychology ,business ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background Identification of the risk factors underlying impulsivity related to violent acts is an essential component of risk assessment and management to reduce violent offending. Aims Our aim was to develop a clinically useful measure for assessing impulsivity related to violence. Our research questions were which items in the newly developed measure are associated with later violent recidivism and what is the measure's predictive validity? Methods A new scale, the impulsivity measure related to violence (IMP-V), was studied by completing the scale, blind to outcome, from information in the forensic psychiatric examination reports of 63 of a 1-year referral cohort of 181 Finnish offenders. Data on reoffending for up to 15 years after release were collected from official criminal records. Results The predictive accuracy of the IMP-V continuous ratings was 78% and for the categorical summary risk ratings 77%. Univariate analyses of categorical summary risk ratings of the risk factors revealed that, with two exceptions, each additional score on the IMP-V was associated with a significant increase in violence recidivism. Conclusions These preliminary results indicate that the IMP-V is a promising decision-enhancing guide for assessing the risk of violence in impulsive people and that the measure is worth developing for use with impulsivity-prone offenders and forensic psychiatric patients. The IMP-V organises information on the nature of impulsivity in violence-prone persons and thus also creates opportunities for more effective risk management.
- Published
- 2019
13. Music Preferences, Friendship, and Externalizing Behavior in Early Adolescence: A SIENA Examination of the Music Marker Theory Using the SNARE Study
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Aart Franken, Loes Keijsers, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra, Tom F. M. ter Bogt, Sociology/ICS, and Developmental Psychology
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Male ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,Dance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Friends ,Empirical Research ,Choice Behavior ,Peer Group ,050105 experimental psychology ,Electronic dance music ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Social network analysis ,Music Marker Theory ,Similarity (psychology) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,SIENA ,Child ,SUBSTANCE USE ,media_common ,RISK ,Schools ,Early adolescence ,4. Education ,TRAILS ,05 social sciences ,Peer group ,Externalizing behavior ,Preference ,Health psychology ,Friendship ,Adolescent Behavior ,METAL ,Highbrow ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Music ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Music Marker Theory posits that music is relevant for the structuring of peer groups and that rock, urban, or dance music preferences relate to externalizing behavior. The present study tested these hypotheses, by investigating the role of music preference similarity in friendship selection and the development of externalizing behavior, while taking the effects of friends’ externalizing behavior into account. Data were used from the first three waves of the SNARE (Social Network Analysis of Risk behavior in Early adolescence) study (N = 1144; 50% boys; Mage = 12.7; SD = 0.47), including students who entered the first-year of secondary school. Two hypotheses were tested. First, adolescents were expected to select friends based both on a similarity in externalizing behavior and music genre preference. Second, a preference for rock, urban, or dance, music types was expected to predict the development of externalizing behavior, even when taking friends’ influence on externalizing behavior into account. Stochastic Actor-Based Modeling indicated that adolescents select their friends based on both externalizing behavior and highbrow music preference. Moreover, both friends’ externalizing behavior and a preference for dance music predicted the development of externalizing behavior. Intervention programs might focus on adolescents with dance music preferences.
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- 2017
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14. Linking delinquency and personal identity formation across adolescence
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Mercer, Natalie, Crocetti, Elisabetta, Branje, Susan, Van Lier, Pol, Meeus, Wim, Leerstoel Branje, Leerstoel Meeus, Adolescent development: Characteristics and determinants, Developmental Psychology, Mercer, Natalie, Crocetti, Elisabetta, Branje, Susan, van Lier, Pol, Meeus, Wim, Leerstoel Branje, Leerstoel Meeus, Adolescent development: Characteristics and determinants, and Research Methods and Techniques
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Male ,Personality development ,Within-persons ,Identity (social science) ,Poison control ,050109 social psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Taverne ,Juvenile delinquency ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,media_common ,Likelihood Functions ,IMMIGRANT EARLY ADOLESCENTS ,05 social sciences ,Erikson's stages of psychosocial development ,delinquency ,Adolescence ,ORIENTATIONS ,YOUTH ,Between-person ,Personal identity ,Female ,PROBLEM BEHAVIOR ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Adolescent ,longitudinal ,Between-persons ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychology, Adolescent ,Self-concept ,personal identity formation ,Models, Psychological ,Personal identity formation ,VALIDATION ,AGE ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,within-persons ,Demography ,Delinquency ,Within-person ,EDUCATIONAL IDENTITY ,STYLES ,Personality Development ,between-persons ,MEASUREMENT INVARIANCE ,Longitudinal ,adolescence ,Identity formation - Abstract
Adolescent delinquency and identity formation have both been described in relation to the confusion, doubt, and need for individuation and autonomy faced by adolescents. While theoretical conceptualizations (e.g., Erikson, 1968; Moffitt, 1993) suggest that delinquency and identity formation might be developmentally intertwined across adolescence, this link had yet to be longitudinally examined. This study tested whether delinquency and identity are related and whether we could determine a developmental order considering both between- and within-person associations across adolescence. We examined these associations in a multi-informant sample of 497 Dutch adolescents followed for 5 annual waves from age 14-18. Between-person cross-lagged models showed that adolescents who scored higher on delinquency relative to their peers, scored lower on commitment and higher on reconsideration, 1 year later. Within-person cross-lagged models showed that when adolescents reported above their own average on delinquency, they reported decreased commitment and increased reconsideration 1 year later. Additionally, within-persons, when adolescents reported an increase in in-depth exploration compared with their own average they reported decreased delinquency 1 year later. From these results we can conclude that delinquency and personal identity are indeed related across adolescence. Experimenting with delinquency hampers identity formation by increasing reconsideration and decreasing commitment. Within-person results suggest that interventions tailored to increase in-depth exploration in adolescents may help to prevent adolescent delinquency. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2017
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15. Financial Problems and Delinquency in Adolescents and Young Adults
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Hoeve, Machteld, Jak, Suzanne, Stams, Geert Jan J M, Meeus, Wim H J, Adolescent development: Characteristics and determinants, Leerstoel Meeus, Developmental Psychology, Adolescent development: Characteristics and determinants, Leerstoel Meeus, Forensic Child and Youth Care (RICDE, FMG), and Methods and Statistics (RICDE, FMG)
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young adults ,Strain theory ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Developmental psychology ,LEAD ,Age and gender ,gender ,Juvenile delinquency ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,adolescents ,Young adult ,financial problems ,0505 law ,Finance ,FIT INDEXES ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,delinquency ,CRIME ,ONSET ,Life course persistent ,050501 criminology ,STRAIN THEORY ,Psychology ,business ,Law ,BEHAVIOR ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The present study examined the link between financial problems and delinquency in adolescents and young adults ( N = 1,258). Using three measurement waves that covered a time span of 6 years, we conducted cross-lagged panel analyses. Overall, we found evidence that financial problems increase the risk of delinquency, and vice versa. Effects of delinquency on financial problems were larger than the other way around. In addition, a longer term (6 year) effect of delinquency on financial problems was found, whereas this effect was not found for financial problems to delinquency. Gender and age did not moderate the financial problem–delinquency link, suggesting that the bidirectional effect between financial problems and delinquency applies to adolescent and young adult males and females. Finally, we found some evidence to suggest that the indirect effects became stronger over time.
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- 2016
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16. Conduct Problem Trajectories Between Age 4 and 17 and Their Association with Behavioral Adjustment in Emerging Adulthood
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Tina Kretschmer, Amaranta D de Haan, Miranda Sentse, Peter Prinzie, Research Methods and Techniques, and Clinical Child and Family Studies
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Adult ,Conduct Disorder ,Male ,Social Psychology ,EARLY-ONSET PERSISTENT ,Population ,Psychological intervention ,Mothers ,Sample (statistics) ,Empirical Research ,ADOLESCENT ,Trajectories ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Emerging adulthood ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Belgium ,Risk Factors ,HISTORY ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,Conduct problems ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Antisocial behavior ,Child ,Association (psychology) ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Mental Disorders ,Mixture modeling ,05 social sciences ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,PROBLEM YOUTH ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Legal psychology ,Health psychology ,MALES ,Conduct disorder ,Child, Preschool ,Normative ,Female ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Individual heterogeneity exists in the onset and development of conduct problems, but theoretical claims about predictors and prognosis are often not consistent with the empirical findings. This study examined shape and outcomes of conduct problem trajectories in a Belgian population-based sample (N = 682; 49.5 % boys). Mothers reported on children’s conduct problems across six waves (age 4–17) and emerging adults reported on their behavioral adjustment (age 17–20). Applying mixture modeling, we found four gender-invariant trajectories (labeled life-course-persistent, adolescence-onset, childhood-limited, and low). The life-course-persistent group was least favorably adjusted, but the adolescence-onset group was similarly maladjusted in externalizing problems and may be less normative (15 % of the sample) than previously believed. The childhood-limited group was at heightened risk for specifically internalizing problems, being more worrisome than its label suggests. Interventions should not only be aimed at early detection of conduct problems, but also at adolescents to avoid future maladjustment.
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- 2016
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17. Outcomes of childhood conduct problem trajectories in early adulthood
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POSTNATAL DEPRESSION SCALE ,RISK BEHAVIOR ,DIFFICULTIES QUESTIONNAIRE ,EARLY-ONSET PERSISTENT ,PERSISTENT ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,Conduct problems ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,HEALTH ,ALSPAC ,PROBLEM YOUTH ,VALIDATION ,TRANSITION ,Trajectory outcomes - Abstract
Although conduct problems in childhood are stably associated with problem outcomes, not every child who presents with conduct problems is at risk. This study extends previous studies by testing whether childhood conduct problem trajectories are predictive of a wide range of other health and behavior problems in early adulthood using a general population sample. Based on 7,218 individuals from the Avon longitudinal study of parents and children, a three-step approach was used to model childhood conduct problem development and identify differences in early adult health and behavior problems. Childhood conduct problems were assessed on six occasions between age 4 and 13 and health and behavior outcomes were measured at age 18. Individuals who displayed early-onset persistent conduct problems throughout childhood were at greater risk for almost all forms of later problems. Individuals on the adolescent-onset conduct problem path consumed more tobacco and illegal drugs and engaged more often in risky sexual behavior than individuals without childhood conduct problems. Levels of health and behavior problems for individuals on the childhood-limited path were in between those for stable low and stable high trajectories. Childhood conduct problems are pervasive and substantially affect adjustment in early adulthood both in at-risk samples as shown in previous studies, but also in a general population sample. Knowing a child's developmental course can help to evaluate the risk for later maladjustment and be indicative of the need for early intervention.
- Published
- 2014
18. Autistic symptoms in childhood arrestees
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DIAGNOSTIC INTERVIEW SCHEDULE ,ASPERGER-SYNDROME ,CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR ,longitudinal study ,PERVASIVE DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS ,SPECTRUM DISORDERS ,delinquency ,CO-MORBIDITY ,Pervasive developmental disorder ,SOCIAL COMMUNICATION DEFICITS ,VERSION 2.3 DISC-2.3 ,externalizing disorder ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,QUESTIONNAIRE CSBQ - Abstract
Background: To compare childhood arrestees with matched comparison groups on levels of autistic symptoms and to assess the unique predictive value of autistic symptoms for future delinquent behavior in childhood arrestees. Methods: Childhood first-time arrestees (n = 308, baseline age 10.7 +/- 1.5 years) were followed up for 2 years. Autistic symptoms, externalizing disorders and delinquent behavior were assessed yearly. Childhood arrestees were compared on autistic symptoms with matched (age, gender) general population and clinical autism spectrum disorder samples. The predictive value of autistic symptoms for delinquent behavior was analyzed using generalized estimating equations. Results: At each assessment, levels of autistic symptoms in childhood arrestees were in between levels found in the general population and autism spectrum disorder samples. Autistic symptoms were positively associated with delinquent behavior in childhood arrestees, even after adjustment for externalizing disorders: IRR (incidence rate ratio) 1.23; 95% CI 1.11-1.36 and IRR 1.29; 95% CI 1.15-1.45 for core autistic symptoms and total symptom score, respectively. Conclusions: Autistic symptoms are more prevalent in childhood arrestees compared to the general population and are uniquely associated with future delinquent behavior. Attention should, therefore, be given to the possible presence of autism related symptomatology in these children. Implications for diagnostic assessment and intervention need further investigation.
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- 2012
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19. Predicting Transitions in Low and High Levels of Risk Behavior from Early to Middle Adolescence: The TRAILS Study
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Monshouwer, K., Harakeh, Z., Lugtig, P.J., Huizink, A., Creemers, H.E., Reijneveld, S.A., De Winter, A.F., Van Oort, F., Ormel, J., Vollebergh, W.A.M., Methodology and statistics for the behavioural and social sciences, Youth in Changing Cultural Contexts, Education and Learning: Cognitive and Motor Disabilities, Leerstoel Vollebergh, LS Vollebergh, Afd methoden en statistieken, Clinical Developmental Psychology, EMGO+ - Mental Health, Methodology and statistics for the behavioural and social sciences, Youth in Changing Cultural Contexts, Education and Learning: Cognitive and Motor Disabilities, Leerstoel Vollebergh, LS Vollebergh, Afd methoden en statistieken, Public Health Research (PHR), Child and Adolescent Psychiatry / Psychology, Public Health, Forensic Child and Youth Care (RICDE, FMG), and Methods and Statistics (RICDE, FMG)
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Male ,Behavioral Symptoms ,SCHOOL-CHILDREN ,Developmental psychology ,Population based cohort ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Netherlands ,Early onset ,Smoking ,05 social sciences ,Age Factors ,CANNABIS USE ,Adolescence ,Substance abuse ,CONDUCT PROBLEMS ,Multiple risk behavior ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Female ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Psychopathology ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,EARLY-ONSET ,Marijuana Smoking ,Late onset ,DRUG-USE ,Article ,MARIJUANA USE ,03 medical and health sciences ,Risk-Taking ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,SUBSTANCE USE ,ADULT OUTCOMES ,Predictors ,Longitudinal data ,Risk behavior ,medicine.disease ,LIMITED ANTISOCIAL PATHWAYS ,Etiology ,Latent transition analysis ,Substance use - Abstract
The present study examined the joint development of substance use and externalizing problems in early and middle adolescence. First, it was tested whether the relevant groups found in previous studies i.e., those with an early onset, a late onset, and no onset or low levels of risk behavior could be identified, while using a developmental model of a single, underlying construct of risk behavior. Second, departing from Moffitt's taxonomy of antisocial behavior, it was tested if early, but not late, onset risk behavior is predicted by a problematic risk profile in childhood. Data were used from TRAILS, a population based cohort study, starting at age 11 with two follow-ups at mean ages of 13.6 and 16.3 years. Latent transition analyses demonstrated that, both in early and middle adolescence, a single underlying construct of risk behavior, consisting of two classes (labeled as low and high risk behavior), adequately represented the data. Respondents could be clearly classified into four possible transition patterns from early to middle adolescence, with a transition from high to low being almost non-existent (2.5 %), low to low (39.4 %) and low to high (41.8 %) being the most prevalent, and high to high (16.2 %) substantial. As hypothesized, only the high-high group was characterized by a clear adverse predictor profile in late childhood, while the low-high group was not. This study demonstrates that the development of substance use is correlated with externalizing problems and underscores the theory that etiologies of early and later onset risk behavior are different. © The Author(s) 2012.
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- 2012
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20. Generation of interpersonal stressful events
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Martin P. Bakker, Albertine J. Oldehinkel, Johan Ormel, Frank C. Verhulst, Siegwart Lindenberg, Department of Social Psychology, University of Groningen, Science in Healthy Ageing & healthcaRE (SHARE), Interdisciplinary Centre Psychopathology and Emotion regulation (ICPE), and Life Course Epidemiology (LCE)
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puberty ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,PEER VICTIMIZATION ,050109 social psychology ,Interpersonal communication ,Developmental psychology ,Interpersonal relationship ,Social skills ,social skills ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,gender ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Assertiveness ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,media_common ,stress generation ,GENDER-DIFFERENCES ,05 social sciences ,Stressor ,PUBERTAL CHANGES ,Peer group ,Self-control ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,MAJOR DEPRESSION ,SELF-CONTROL ,DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS ,Peer victimization ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,EXTERNALIZING PROBLEMS ,COURSE PATTERNS - Abstract
This study developed two specifications of the social skills deficit stress generation hypothesis: the “gender-incongruence” hypothesis to predict peer victimization and the “need for autonomy” hypothesis to predict conflict with authorities. These hypotheses were tested in a prospective large population cohort of 2,064 Dutch young adolescents. Social skills and pubertal timing were measured when the sample was about 11 years old, and stressful life events were measured 2.5 years later at follow-up. As predicted by the gender-incongruence hypothesis, poor assertion in boys and poor self-control in girls were associated with peer victimization. Consistent with the need for autonomy hypothesis, poor self-control was associated with conflict with authorities, in both boys and girls. Furthermore, early physical maturation exacerbated the effect of poor self-control on conflict with authorities for both genders. These specific associations provide more insights in the pathways that result in the experience of interpersonal stressors in young adolescents.
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- 2011
21. The delicate balance between parental protection, unsupervised wandering, and adolescents' autonomy and its relation with antisocial behavior
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Miranda Sentse, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra, Siegwart Lindenberg, René Veenstra, Johan Ormel, Sociology/ICS, and Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG
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SAMPLE ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poison control ,CHILDREN ,Suicide prevention ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Injury prevention ,antisocial friends ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parenting styles ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,0505 law ,media_common ,Child rearing ,05 social sciences ,fungi ,Human factors and ergonomics ,PUBERTAL CHANGES ,YOUNG ADOLESCENTS ,Social relation ,unsupervised wandering ,CHILDHOOD PREDICTORS ,FAMILY ,parental protection ,antisocial behavior ,050501 criminology ,DELINQUENT-BEHAVIOR ,adolescence ,GENDER ,Psychology ,biological maturation ,PEERS ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Autonomy ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
In a large sample of early adolescents (T2: N = 1023; M age = 13.51; 55.5% girls), the impact of parental protection and unsupervised wandering on adolescents’ antisocial behavior 2.5 years later was tested in this TRAILS study; gender and parental knowledge were controlled for. In addition, the level of biological maturation and having antisocial friends were included as possible moderators for the associations of parental protection and unsupervised wandering with adolescent antisocial behavior. The negative effect of protection on engagement in antisocial behavior held only for boys and for early-maturing adolescents, whereas the effect of unsupervised wandering was found only for boys and for adolescents who had antisocial friends. The results point to a delicate balance between parental protection and unsupervised wandering with respect to adolescents’ autonomy.
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- 2010
22. Prosocial and antisocial behavior in preadolescence: Teachers' and parents' perceptions of the behavior of girls and boys
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René Veenstra, Andrea F. de Winter, Johan Ormel, Albertine J. Oldehinkel, Frank C. Verhulst, Siegwart Lindenberg, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry / Psychology, Sociology/ICS, Interdisciplinary Centre Psychopathology and Emotion regulation (ICPE), Life Course Epidemiology (LCE), and Public Health Research (PHR)
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VICTIMIZATION ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,CHILDHOOD ,Academic achievement ,childhood development ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,CONFIGURATIONS ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,media_common ,Preadolescence ,antisocial behaviour ,Social perception ,Aggression ,adolescent development ,TEMPERAMENT ,social perception ,Self-control ,Prosocial behavior ,EARLY ADOLESCENCE ,AGGRESSION ,Temperament ,medicine.symptom ,prosocial behaviour ,TRAJECTORIES ,Psychology ,FOLLOW-UP ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,EXTERNALIZING PROBLEMS - Abstract
There has been recent emphasis on the importance of investigating prosocial and antisocial behavior simultaneously owing to doubts about whether examining one automatically gives information about the other. However, there has been little empirical research into this question. The present study (based on a large population sample of preadolescents, N = 2,230) simultaneously examines prosocial and antisocial behavior, explicitly including the possibility that children might show prosocial behavior according to one informant and antisocial behavior according to another. When parents and teachers agreed in their judgments, children were distinctly profiled and differed clearly in effortful control, intelligence, academic performance, and several peer nominations and family characteristics. The correlates were more rater-specific for children that were prosocial according to one informant and antisocial according to the other informant. Teachers and parents used different context-dependent criteria for judging children to be prosocial or antisocial. Academic performance and peer relations were related to the teacher's judgment of prosocial and antisocial behavior. By contrast, children's being problematic at home (and thus causing stress for the parents) was related to the parents' judgment.
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- 2008
23. Mapping the structural organization of the brain in conduct disorder : replication of findings in two independent samples
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Fairchild, G, Toschi, N, Sully, K, Sonuga-Barke, Ejs, Hagan, Cc, Diciotti, S, Goodyer, Im, Calder, Aj, Passamonti, L, Goodyer, Ian [0000-0001-9183-0373], Passamonti, Luca [0000-0002-7937-0615], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Fairchild, Graeme, Toschi, Nicola, Sully, Kate, Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J.S., Hagan, Cindy C., Diciotti, Stefano, Goodyer, Ian M., Calder, Andrew J., and Passamonti, Luca
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Adult ,Conduct Disorder ,Male ,structural covariance ,Adolescent ,EARLY-ONSET ,CHILDHOOD ,SURFACE-AREA ,Pediatrics ,Cortical thickness ,Young Adult ,developmental taxonomic theory ,Antisocial behavior ,Conduct disorder ,Developmental taxonomic theory ,Structural covariance ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Age of Onset ,Cortical thickne ,Cerebral Cortex ,conduct disorder ,ABNORMALITIES ,behavior ,Settore FIS/07 ,Original Articles ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,Perinatology and Child Health ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,antisocial ,antisocial behavior ,ADOLESCENCE ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Original Article ,HUMAN CEREBRAL-CORTEX ,MRI - Abstract
BackgroundNeuroimaging methods that allow researchers to investigate structural covariance between brain regions are increasingly being used to study psychiatric disorders. Structural covariance analyses are particularly well suited for studying disorders with putative neurodevelopmental origins as they appear sensitive to changes in the synchronized maturation of different brain regions. We assessed interregional correlations in cortical thickness as a measure of structural covariance, and applied this method to investigate the coordinated development of different brain regions in conduct disorder (CD). We also assessed whether structural covariance measures could differentiate between the childhood‐onset (CO‐CD) and adolescence‐onset (AO‐CD) subtypes of CD, which may differ in terms of etiology and adult outcomes.MethodsWe examined interregional correlations in cortical thickness in male youths with CO‐CD or AO‐CD relative to healthy controls (HCs) in two independent datasets. The age range in the Cambridge sample was 16–21 years (mean: 18.0), whereas the age range of the Southampton sample was 13–18 years (mean: 16.7). We used FreeSurfer to perform segmentations and applied structural covariance methods to the resulting parcellations.ResultsIn both samples, CO‐CD participants displayed a strikingly higher number of significant cross‐cortical correlations compared to HC or AO‐CD participants, whereas AO‐CD participants presented fewer significant correlations than HCs. Group differences in the strength of the interregional correlations were observed in both samples, and each set of results remained significant when controlling for IQ and comorbid attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms.ConclusionsThis study provides new evidence for quantitative differences in structural brain organization between the CO‐CD and AO‐CD subtypes, and supports the hypothesis that both subtypes of CD have neurodevelopmental origins.
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- 2016
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24. Toward an animal model for antisocial behavior
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ATTACK LATENCY MICE ,mouse model ,aggression ,VIOLENT BEHAVIOR ,WILD HOUSE MICE ,AGGRESSIVE-BEHAVIOR ,5-HT1B RECEPTOR ,violence ,antisocial behavior ,SEROTONIN TRANSPORTER ,INTERMALE AGGRESSION ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,MONOAMINE OXIDASE-A ,FIBER DISTRIBUTIONS - Abstract
The goal of this article is to examine whether mouse lines genetically selected for short and long attack latencies are good animal models for antisocial behavior in humans. To this end, we compared male Short and Long Attack Latency mice (SAL and LAL, respectively) with the extremes of the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study (men who persistently displayed antisocial behavior [Persisters] and men who never manifested antisocial behavior [Abstainers]). Groups were compared on the basis of five distinct domains: aggression/violence, reproduction, cognition, behavioral disorders, and endophenotypes. Our observations point to considerable parallels between, on one side, SAL and Persisters, and, on the other side, between LAL and Abstainers (but to a lesser extent). We believe that SAL and LAL are good mouse models to study the development of antisocial behavior and will yield valuable and testable hypotheses with regard to the neurobiological and genetical architecture of antisocial behavior.
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- 2003
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25. Strong genetic effects on cross-situational antisocial behaviour among 5-year-old children according to mothers, teachers, examiner-observers, and twins' self-reports
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DIAGNOSTIC INTERVIEW SCHEDULE ,antisocial behaviour ,AGE 3 YEARS ,PARENTAL RATINGS ,self-reports ,twins ,ATTENTION-DEFICIT ,3-YEAR-OLD TWINS ,TEST-RETEST ,MIDDLE CHILDHOOD ,environmental influences ,genetics ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,VIRGINIA TWIN ,FUTURE-DIRECTIONS - Abstract
Background: Early childhood antisocial behaviour is a strong prognostic indicator for poor adult mental health. Thus, information about its etiology is needed. Genetic etiology is unknown because most research with young children focuses on environmental risk factors, and the few existing studies of young twins used only mothers' reports of behaviour, which may be biased. Method: We investigated genetic influences on antisocial behaviour in a representative-plus-high-risk sample of 1116 pairs of 5-year-old twins using data from four independent sources: mothers, teachers, examiner-observers previously unacquainted with the children, and the children themselves. Results: Children's antisocial behaviour was reliably measured by all four informants; no bias was detected in mothers', teachers', examiners', or children's reports. Variation in antisocial behaviour that was agreed upon by all informants, and thus was pervasive across settings, was influenced by genetic factors (82%) and experiences specific to each child (18%). Variation in antisocial behaviour that was specific to each informant was meaningful variation, as it was also influenced by genetic factors (from 33% for the children's report to 71% for the teachers' report). Conclusions: This study and four others of very young twins show that genetic risks contribute strongly to population variation in antisocial behaviour that emerges in early childhood. In contrast, genetic risk is known to be relatively modest for adolescent antisocial behaviour, suggesting that the early-childhood form has a distinct etiology, particularly if it is pervasive across situations.
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- 2003
26. Outcomes of childhood conduct problem trajectories in early adulthood: findings from the ALSPAC study
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Kretschmer, Tina, Hickman, Matthew, Doerner, Rita, Emond, Alan, Lewis, Glyn, Macleod, John, Maughan, Barbara, Munafò, Marcus R., Heron, Jon, and Sociology/ICS
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POSTNATAL DEPRESSION SCALE ,EARLY-ONSET PERSISTENT ,PERSISTENT ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,ALSPAC ,PROBLEM YOUTH ,VALIDATION ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,RISK BEHAVIOR ,DIFFICULTIES QUESTIONNAIRE ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health ,Conduct problems ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,HEALTH ,TRANSITION ,Trajectory outcomes - Abstract
Although conduct problems in childhood are stably associated with problem outcomes, not every child who presents with conduct problems is at risk. This study extends previous studies by testing whether childhood conduct problem trajectories are predictive of a wide range of other health and behavior problems in early adulthood using a general population sample. Based on 7,218 individuals from the Avon longitudinal study of parents and children, a three-step approach was used to model childhood conduct problem development and identify differences in early adult health and behavior problems. Childhood conduct problems were assessed on six occasions between age 4 and 13 and health and behavior outcomes were measured at age 18. Individuals who displayed early-onset persistent conduct problems throughout childhood were at greater risk for almost all forms of later problems. Individuals on the adolescent-onset conduct problem path consumed more tobacco and illegal drugs and engaged more often in risky sexual behavior than individuals without childhood conduct problems. Levels of health and behavior problems for individuals on the childhood-limited path were in between those for stable low and stable high trajectories. Childhood conduct problems are pervasive and substantially affect adjustment in early adulthood both in at-risk samples as shown in previous studies, but also in a general population sample. Knowing a child's developmental course can help to evaluate the risk for later maladjustment and be indicative of the need for early intervention.
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- 2014
27. Early detection of children at risk for antisocial behaviour using data from routine preventive child healthcare
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Matty R. Crone, Sijmen A. Reijneveld, Gea de Meer, and Science in Healthy Ageing & healthcaRE (SHARE)
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Conduct Disorder ,Male ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Poison control ,Antisocial behaviour ,Child Behavior Disorders ,TOCA-R SCORES ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,PSYCHOSOCIAL PROBLEMS ,Well-child care record ,AGE ,Preventive Health Services ,Injury prevention ,Juvenile delinquency ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Child ,Psychiatry ,PREDICTORS ,DELINQUENCY ,IDENTIFICATION ,business.industry ,Antisocial personality disorder ,Prevention ,lcsh:RJ1-570 ,PSYCHOPATHOLOGY ,Human factors and ergonomics ,lcsh:Pediatrics ,Early detection ,Antisocial Personality Disorder ,medicine.disease ,CONDUCT PROBLEMS ,Early Diagnosis ,Logistic Models ,Conduct disorder ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Self Report ,business ,Algorithms ,Research Article ,VIOLENCE - Abstract
Background Youth antisocial behaviour is highly prevalent. Young people are usually not willing to disclose such behaviour to professionals and parents. Our aim was to assess whether child health professionals (CHP) working in preventive child healthcare could identify pre-adolescents at risk for antisocial behaviour through using data that they obtain in routine practice. Methods CHPs examined a national sample of 974 pre-adolescents aged 8-12 years (response 79.1%), and interviewed parents and children during routine well-child assessments. We obtained data on family background and current health of the child from the CHP; on developmental concerns from parents, and on social and emotional well-being, injuries, and substance use from the children. Antisocial behaviour concerned the adolescent-reported 15 item International Self-Reported Delinquency study questionnaire, among which are 5 items on violence against people. Results The prevalence of 2+acts of any antisocial behaviour was 21.8%, and 33.9% for 1+acts of violence (10.5% for 2+). Children who were male, had a young mother, no parent employed, recent injuries, poor performance at school or who were bored by school, and who had parental concerns more often reported 2+antisocial acts and 1+violence against people. Detection algorithms on the basis of these variables were moderately able to classify outcomes, with Areas-Under-the-Curves ranging from 0.66 to 0.71. Conclusions Data from routine well-child assessment can help CHPs to detect pre-adolescents at risk for antisocial behaviour, but detection algorithms need to be further improved. This could be done by obtaining additional information on factors that are associated with antisocial behaviour.
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- 2012
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28. Autistic symptoms in childhood arrestees: longitudinal association with delinquent behavior
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Geluk, Charlotte A. M. L., Jansen, Lucres M. C., Vermeiren, Robert, Doreleijers, Theo A. H., van Domburgh, Lieke, de Bildt, Annelies, Twisk, Jos W. R., Hartman, Catharina A., Interdisciplinary Centre Psychopathology and Emotion regulation (ICPE), and Life Course Epidemiology (LCE)
- Subjects
DIAGNOSTIC INTERVIEW SCHEDULE ,ASPERGER-SYNDROME ,CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR ,longitudinal study ,PERVASIVE DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS ,SPECTRUM DISORDERS ,delinquency ,CO-MORBIDITY ,Pervasive developmental disorder ,SOCIAL COMMUNICATION DEFICITS ,VERSION 2.3 DISC-2.3 ,externalizing disorder ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,QUESTIONNAIRE CSBQ - Abstract
Background: To compare childhood arrestees with matched comparison groups on levels of autistic symptoms and to assess the unique predictive value of autistic symptoms for future delinquent behavior in childhood arrestees. Methods: Childhood first-time arrestees (n = 308, baseline age 10.7 +/- 1.5 years) were followed up for 2 years. Autistic symptoms, externalizing disorders and delinquent behavior were assessed yearly. Childhood arrestees were compared on autistic symptoms with matched (age, gender) general population and clinical autism spectrum disorder samples. The predictive value of autistic symptoms for delinquent behavior was analyzed using generalized estimating equations. Results: At each assessment, levels of autistic symptoms in childhood arrestees were in between levels found in the general population and autism spectrum disorder samples. Autistic symptoms were positively associated with delinquent behavior in childhood arrestees, even after adjustment for externalizing disorders: IRR (incidence rate ratio) 1.23; 95% CI 1.11-1.36 and IRR 1.29; 95% CI 1.15-1.45 for core autistic symptoms and total symptom score, respectively. Conclusions: Autistic symptoms are more prevalent in childhood arrestees compared to the general population and are uniquely associated with future delinquent behavior. Attention should, therefore, be given to the possible presence of autism related symptomatology in these children. Implications for diagnostic assessment and intervention need further investigation.
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- 2012
29. Classes of adolescents with disruptive behaviors in a general population sample
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Frouke E. P. L. Sondeijker, Andea F. De Winter, Frank C. Verhulst, René Veenstra, Albertine J. Oldehinkel, Johan Ormel, Robert F. Ferdinand, Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG, Sociology/ICS, Interdisciplinary Centre Psychopathology and Emotion regulation (ICPE), Life Course Epidemiology (LCE), Public Health Research (PHR), and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry / Psychology
- Subjects
Male ,Health (social science) ,ODD ,Population sample ,Epidemiology ,CHILDHOOD ,CHILDREN ,general population ,Developmental psychology ,0302 clinical medicine ,adolescents ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Child ,EXTERNALIZING BEHAVIOR ,education.field_of_study ,05 social sciences ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,Latent class model ,ATTENTION-DEFICIT ,CD ,LATENT-CLASS ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders ,Conduct disorder ,Homogeneous ,Population Surveillance ,Female ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,Population ,NESTED HYPOTHESES ,03 medical and health sciences ,DSM-IV ,mental disorders ,medicine ,latent class analysis ,Humans ,ADHD ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,education ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,CONDUCT DISORDER ,Attention deficit ,Etiology ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background To study disruptive behaviors adequately, we need to distinguish between individuals with different types of problems that may have a different etiology. The availability of a taxonomic system that helps in identifying homogeneous groups of individuals, with similar patterns of disruptive behaviors, is crucial to achieve this goal. Therefore, we examine which classes of preadolescents with symptoms of Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Oppositional Defiant Disorder ( ODD), and Conduct Disorder (CD) can be identified in the general population. Methods Disruptive behaviors of 2,230 10-12 year olds from the Dutch general population were assessed with the Child Behavior Checklist and Youth. Self-Report. Results Latent class analysis revealed three classes of preadolescents: the first characterized by high scores on ADHD, ODD, and CD items; a second by high probabilities of ADHD and ODD symptoms; a third with low scores on all items. Conclusions Because classes of preadolescents with symptoms of only one type of disruptive behavior problems could not be identified, it can be questioned how useful separate diagnostic distinctions are in general population studies.
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- 2005
30. Toward an animal model for antisocial behavior: Parallels between mice and humans
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Sluyter, F., Arseneault, L., Moffitt, T.E., Veenema, A.H., de Boer, S., and Koolhaas, J.M.
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ATTACK LATENCY MICE ,mouse model ,aggression ,VIOLENT BEHAVIOR ,WILD HOUSE MICE ,AGGRESSIVE-BEHAVIOR ,5-HT1B RECEPTOR ,violence ,antisocial behavior ,SEROTONIN TRANSPORTER ,INTERMALE AGGRESSION ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,MONOAMINE OXIDASE-A ,FIBER DISTRIBUTIONS - Abstract
The goal of this article is to examine whether mouse lines genetically selected for short and long attack latencies are good animal models for antisocial behavior in humans. To this end, we compared male Short and Long Attack Latency mice (SAL and LAL, respectively) with the extremes of the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study (men who persistently displayed antisocial behavior [Persisters] and men who never manifested antisocial behavior [Abstainers]). Groups were compared on the basis of five distinct domains: aggression/violence, reproduction, cognition, behavioral disorders, and endophenotypes. Our observations point to considerable parallels between, on one side, SAL and Persisters, and, on the other side, between LAL and Abstainers (but to a lesser extent). We believe that SAL and LAL are good mouse models to study the development of antisocial behavior and will yield valuable and testable hypotheses with regard to the neurobiological and genetical architecture of antisocial behavior.
- Published
- 2003
31. The Role of Self-Control and Early Adolescents’ Friendships in the Development of Externalizing Behavior: The SNARE Study
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Terrie E. Moffitt, Wilma A. M. Vollebergh, Aart Franken, Christian Steglich, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra, Zeena Harakeh, and Sociology/ICS
- Subjects
Male ,SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS ,SELECTION ,DYNAMICS ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,GENERAL-THEORY ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychology, Adolescent ,Psychological intervention ,Poison control ,Empirical Research ,Developmental psychology ,Education ,ALCOHOL-USE ,Social Facilitation ,Risk-Taking ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,Antisocial behavior ,SIENA ,Child ,Internal-External Control ,0505 law ,media_common ,Social network ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Self-control ,Antisocial Personality Disorder ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,Health psychology ,Friendship ,Tobacco use ,PEER INFLUENCE ,050501 criminology ,Female ,DELINQUENT PEERS ,SMOKING ,business ,Psychology ,Alcohol use ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
This social network study investigated the moderating role of self-control in the association between friendship and the development of externalizing behavior: Antisocial behavior, alcohol use, tobacco use. Previous studies have shown inconsistent findings, and did not control for possible friendship network or selection effects. We tested two complementary hypotheses: (1) That early- adolescents with low self-control develop externalizing behavior regardless of their friends' behavior, or (2) as a result of being influenced by their friends' externalizing behavior to a greater extent. Hypotheses were investigated using data from the SNARE (Social Network Analysis of Risk behavior in Early adolescence) study (N = 1144, 50 % boys, Mage 12.7, SD = 0.47). We controlled for se- lection effects and the network structure, using a data- analysis package called SIENA. The main findings indicate that personal low self-control and friends' externalizing behaviors both predict early adolescents' increasing ex- ternalizing behaviors, but they do so independently. Therefore, interventions should focus on all early adoles- cents' with a lower self-control, rather than focus on those adolescents with a lower self-control who also have friends who engage in externalizing behavior.
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32. Early Adolescent Friendship Selection Based on Externalizing Behavior: the Moderating Role of Pubertal Development. The SNARE Study
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Zeena Harakeh, Wilma A. M. Vollebergh, Aart Franken, Jan Kornelis Dijkstra, Christian Steglich, Mitchell J. Prinstein, and Sociology/ICS
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Male ,DYNAMICS ,Adolescent ,NETWORK ANALYSIS ,SOCIAL NETWORK ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Child Behavior ,Poison control ,Friends ,050109 social psychology ,Choice Behavior ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Social network analysis ,ALCOHOL-USE ,Social support ,Pubertal development ,Juvenile delinquency ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,SIENA ,Child ,SUBSTANCE USE ,DELINQUENCY ,media_common ,RISK ,Social network ,business.industry ,4. Education ,Puberty ,05 social sciences ,Social Support ,Social environment ,Human factors and ergonomics ,ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ,Moderation ,Tobacco use ,Friendship ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,PEER INFLUENCE ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Female ,Alcohol use ,business ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
This study examined friendship (de-)selection processes in early adolescence. Pubertal development was examined as a potential moderator. It was expected that pubertal development would be associated with an increased tendency for adolescents to select their friends based on their similarities in externalizing behavior engagement (i.e., delinquency, alcohol use, and tobacco use). Data were used from the first three waves of the SNARE (Social Network Analysis of Risk behavior in Early adolescence) study (N = 1144; 50 % boys; M age = 12.7; SD = 0.47), including students who entered the first year of secondary school. The hypothesis was tested using Stochastic Actor-Based Modeling in SIENA. While taking the network structure into account, and controlling for peer influence effects, the results supported this hypothesis. Early adolescents with higher pubertal development were as likely as their peers to select friends based on similarity in externalizing behavior and especially likely to remain friends with peers who had a similar level of externalizing behavior, and thus break friendship ties with dissimilar friends in this respect. As early adolescents are actively engaged in reorganizing their social context, adolescents with a higher pubertal development are especially likely to lose friendships with peers who do not engage in externalizing behavior, thus losing an important source of adaptive social control (i.e., friends who do not engage in externalizing behavior). Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10802-016-0134-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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33. Strong genetic effects on cross-situational antisocial behaviour among 5-year-old children according to mothers, teachers, examiner-observers, and twins' self-reports
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Louise Arseneault, Terrie Edith Moffitt, Avshalom Caspi, Taylor, A., Fruhling Vesta Rijsdijk, Jaffee, S. R., Ablow, J. C., Measelle, J. R., and University of Groningen
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DIAGNOSTIC INTERVIEW SCHEDULE ,antisocial behaviour ,AGE 3 YEARS ,PARENTAL RATINGS ,self-reports ,twins ,ATTENTION-DEFICIT ,3-YEAR-OLD TWINS ,TEST-RETEST ,MIDDLE CHILDHOOD ,environmental influences ,genetics ,LIFE-COURSE-PERSISTENT ,VIRGINIA TWIN ,FUTURE-DIRECTIONS - Abstract
Background: Early childhood antisocial behaviour is a strong prognostic indicator for poor adult mental health. Thus, information about its etiology is needed. Genetic etiology is unknown because most research with young children focuses on environmental risk factors, and the few existing studies of young twins used only mothers' reports of behaviour, which may be biased. Method: We investigated genetic influences on antisocial behaviour in a representative-plus-high-risk sample of 1116 pairs of 5-year-old twins using data from four independent sources: mothers, teachers, examiner-observers previously unacquainted with the children, and the children themselves. Results: Children's antisocial behaviour was reliably measured by all four informants; no bias was detected in mothers', teachers', examiners', or children's reports. Variation in antisocial behaviour that was agreed upon by all informants, and thus was pervasive across settings, was influenced by genetic factors (82%) and experiences specific to each child (18%). Variation in antisocial behaviour that was specific to each informant was meaningful variation, as it was also influenced by genetic factors (from 33% for the children's report to 71% for the teachers' report). Conclusions: This study and four others of very young twins show that genetic risks contribute strongly to population variation in antisocial behaviour that emerges in early childhood. In contrast, genetic risk is known to be relatively modest for adolescent antisocial behaviour, suggesting that the early-childhood form has a distinct etiology, particularly if it is pervasive across situations.
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