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The developmental course of psychopathic features: Investigating stability, change, and long-term outcomes.

Authors :
Hawes, Samuel W.
Byrd, Amy L.
Gonzalez, Raul
Cavanagh, Caitlin
Bechtold, Jordan
Lynam, Donald R.
Pardini, Dustin A.
Source :
Journal of Research in Personality. Dec2018, Vol. 77, p83-89. 7p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Highlights • Multi-cohort, longitudinal investigation delineated trajectories of youth psychopathy. • Findings revealed substantial malleability in developmental course of psychopathy. • Chronically high trajectory exhibited most deleterious outcomes in later adulthood. • Unique pathways exert considerable influence on future antisocial and criminal behaviors. Abstract This multi-cohort study delineates developmental trajectories of psychopathic features across childhood and adolescence (ages 7–16) and investigates associations with adult outcomes (ages ∼ 23–34). Although most youth demonstrated consistently low levels of psychopathic features, approximately 10–15% followed a chronically high trajectory. A similar number (∼14%) displayed initially high levels that decreased over time, while others (∼10–20%) followed an increasing pattern. Boys in the chronically high trajectory exhibited the most deleterious adult outcomes and some evidence suggested that youth in the decreasing subgroup experienced fewer maladaptive outcomes than those in the increasing and high groups. Findings revealed substantial malleability in the developmental course of psychopathic features and suggest that unique pathways may exert considerable influence on future engagement in antisocial and criminal behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00926566
Volume :
77
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Research in Personality
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132940648
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2018.09.009