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Chronic, increasing, and decreasing peer victimization trajectories and the development of externalizing and internalizing problems in middle childhood Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Idean Ettekal, Haoran Li, Anjali Chaudhary, Wen Luo, Rebecca J. Brooker
Children’s peer victimization trajectories and their longitudinal associations with externalizing and internalizing problems were investigated from Grades 2 to 5. Secondary data analysis was performed with the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study (ECLS-K-2011; n = 13,860, Mage = 8.1 years old in the spring of Grade 2; 51.1% male, 46.7% White, 13.2% African-American, 25.3% Hispanic or Latino, 8.5% Asian
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Domain specificity of differential susceptibility: Testing an evolutionary theory of temperament in early childhood Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-13 Rochelle F. Hentges, Patrick T. Davies, Melissa L. Sturge-Apple
According to differential susceptibility theory (DST), some children may be more sensitive to both positive and negative features of the environment. However, research has generated a list of widely disparate temperamental traits that may reflect differential susceptibility to the environment. In addition, findings have implicated these temperament × environment interactions in predicting a wide variety
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Behavioral, cognitive, and socioemotional pathways from early childhood adversity to BMI: Evidence from two prospective, longitudinal studies Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Jenalee R. Doom, Ethan S. Young, Allison K. Farrell, Glenn I. Roisman, Jeffry A. Simpson
Childhood adversity is associated with higher adult weight, but few investigations prospectively test mechanisms accounting for this association. Using two socioeconomically high-risk prospective longitudinal investigations, the Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Risk and Adaptation (MLSRA; N = 267; 45.3% female) and the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS; n = 2,587; 48.5% female), pathways
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Testing transactional processes between parental support and adolescent depressive symptoms: From a daily to a biennial timescale Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Savannah Boele, Stefanie A. Nelemans, Jaap J. A. Denissen, Peter Prinzie, Anne Bülow, Loes Keijsers
Transactional processes between parental support and adolescents’ depressive symptoms might differ in the short term versus long term. Therefore, this multi-sample study tested bidirectional within-family associations between perceived parental support and depressive symptoms in adolescents with datasets with varying measurement intervals: Daily (N = 244, Mage = 13.8 years, 38% male), bi-weekly (N
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Anxiety, academic achievement, and academic self-concept: Meta-analytic syntheses of their relations across developmental periods Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Laura E. Brumariu, Stephanie M. Waslin, Marissa Gastelle, Logan B. Kochendorfer, Kathryn A. Kerns
This systematic review examined how anxiety symptoms and anxiety disorders relate to academic achievement, school dropout, and academic self-concept. Studies with children or adult samples were included in seven meta-analyses (ks for number of samples ranged from 5 to 156; N’s for participants ranged from 780 to 37, 203). Results revealed significant but very small effect sizes for the relations between
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Anxiety-specific associations with substance use: Evidence of a protective factor in adolescence and a risk factor in adulthood Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Maya M. Rieselbach, Robin P. Corley, John K. Hewitt, Soo Hyun Rhee
Externalizing psychopathology is a strong risk factor for substance use, whereas the role of internalizing manifestations of distress, and anxiety in particular, in predicting substance use remains unclear. Studies have suggested that anxiety may be either a protective or risk factor for substance use. The present study aimed to clarify evidence for anxiety-specific associations with substance use
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Efficacy to avoid violence and parenting: A moderated mediation of violence exposure for African American urban-dwelling boys Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Alvin Thomas, Shervin Assari, Erica Odukoya, Cleopatra H. Caldwell
We took a risk and resilience approach to investigating how witnessing physical violence influences adolescent violent behaviors overtime. We proposed efficacy to avoid violence as a major path of influence in this negative trajectory of adolescent development. We also focus on the protective roles of parenting behaviors for African American boys living in disadvantaged contexts. Most of our sample
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Mind-mindedness and preschool children’s behavioral difficulties: The moderating role of maternal parenting distress Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Lucy Hobby, Amy L. Bird, Michelle L. Townsend, Jacqueline Barnes
Mind-mindedness (MM) is a caregiver’s tendency to appreciate their infant’s internal mental states. This longitudinal study investigated whether maternal MM (10 months) was linked with children’s later behavioral problems (51 months) and the moderating role of maternal parenting distress (PD; 36 months) in a sample of 91 mother–infant dyads. Appropriate MM comments were coded from video-recorded, semi-structured
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Adolescents’ internalizing symptoms predict dating violence victimization and perpetration 2 years later Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-27 Lamprini Psychogiou, Marilyn N. Ahun, Marie-Claude Geoffroy, Mara Brendgen, Sylvana M. Côté
The aim of this longitudinal study was to examine bidirectional associations of adolescents’ internalizing symptoms with dating violence victimization and perpetration. We conducted secondary analyses of the Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development data (n = 974). Each adolescent completed items from the Conflict Tactics Scale (at ages 15 and 17 years) to assess psychological, physical, and sexual
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Developmental pathways from preschool temper tantrums to later psychopathology Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-20 Caroline P. Hoyniak, Meghan R. Donohue, Laura E. Quiñones-Camacho, Alecia C. Vogel, Michael T. Perino, Laura Hennefield, Rebecca Tillman, Deanna M. Barch, Joan L. Luby
Temper tantrums are sudden, overt negative emotional displays that are disproportionate to the eliciting event. Research supports that severe temper tantrums during the preschool period are associated with preschool psychopathology, but few studies have identified which characteristics of preschool tantrums are predictive of distal psychopathological outcomes in later childhood and adolescence. To
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Frontal EEG asymmetry moderates the relation between borderline personality disorder features and feelings of social rejection in adolescents Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-20 Victoria E. Stead, Louis A. Schmidt, Michael J. Crowley, Lisa Dyce, Geoffrey B. Hall, Ryan J. Van Lieshout, Khrista Boylan
Although associations among borderline personality disorder (BPD), social rejection, and frontal EEG alpha asymmetry scores (FAA, a neural correlate of emotion regulation and approach-withdrawal motivations) have been explored in different studies, relatively little work has examined these relations during adolescence in the same study. We examined whether FAA moderated the relation between BPD features
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Heterogeneous trajectories of suicidal ideation among homeless youth: predictors and suicide-related outcomes Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-20 Qiong Wu, Jing Zhang, Laura Walsh, Natasha Slesnick
The current study examined heterogeneous trajectories of suicidal ideation among homeless youth experiencing suicidal ideation over 9 months in a randomized controlled intervention study. Suicidal homeless youth (N = 150) were randomly assigned to Cognitive Therapy for Suicide Prevention (CTSP) + Treatment as Usual (TAU) or TAU alone. Youth reported their suicidal ideation four times during a 9-month
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Negative emotionality as a candidate mediating mechanism linking prenatal maternal mood problems and offspring internalizing behaviour Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-20 Cathryn Gordon Green, Eszter Szekely, Vanessa Babineau, Alexia Jolicoeur-Martineau, Andrée-Anne Bouvette-Turcot, Klaus Minde, Roberto Sassi, Leslie Atkinson, James L. Kennedy, Meir Steiner, John Lydon, Helene Gaudreau, Jacob A. Burack, Catherine Herba, Marie-Helene Pennestri, Robert Levitan, Michael J. Meaney, Ashley Wazana
Negative emotionality (NE) was evaluated as a candidate mechanism linking prenatal maternal affective symptoms and offspring internalizing problems during the preschool/early school age period. The participants were 335 mother–infant dyads from the Maternal Adversity, Vulnerability and Neurodevelopment project. A Confirmatory Bifactor Analysis (CFA) based on self-report measures of prenatal depression
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Risk clustering and psychopathology from a multi-center cohort of Indian children, adolescents, and young adults Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-08 Debasish Basu, Abhishek Ghosh, Chandrima Naskar, Srinivas Balachander, Gwen Fernandes, Nilakshi Vaidya, Kalyanaraman Kumaran, Murali Krishna, Gareth J. Barker, Eesha Sharma, Pratima Murthy, Bharath Holla, Sanjeev Jain, Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos, Kartik Kalyanram, Meera Purushottam, Rose Dawn Bharath, Mathew Varghese, Kandavel Thennarasu, Amit Chakrabarti, Rajkumar Lenin Singh, Roshan Lourembam Singh
Developmental adversities early in life are associated with later psychopathology. Clustering may be a useful approach to group multiple diverse risks together and study their relation with psychopathology. To generate risk clusters of children, adolescents, and young adults, based on adverse environmental exposure and developmental characteristics, and to examine the association of risk clusters with
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Latent classes in preschoolers’ internal working models of attachment and emotional security: Roles of family risk Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-08 Ruth Speidel, Brigid Behrens, Monica Lawson, E. Mark Cummings, Kristin Valentino
Children’s relationships inform their internal working models (IWMs) of the world around them. Attachment and emotional security theory (EST) emphasize the importance of parent–child and interparental relationships, respectively, for IWM. The current study examined (a) data-driven classes in child attachment and emotional security IWM, (b) associations between IWM classes and demographic variables
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Mean-level correspondence and moment-to-moment synchrony in adolescent and parent affect: Exploring associations with adolescent age and internalizing and externalizing symptoms Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-07 Lauren M. Henry, Kelly H. Watson, David A. Cole, Sofia Torres, Allison Vreeland, Rachel E. Siciliano, Allegra S. Anderson, Meredith A. Gruhn, Abagail Ciriegio, Cassandra Broll, Jon Ebert, Tarah Kuhn, Bruce E. Compas
Interactions with parents are integral in shaping the development of children’s emotional processes. Important aspects of these interactions are overall (mean level) affective experience and affective synchrony (linkages between parent and child affect across time). Respectively, mean-level affect and affective synchrony reflect aspects of the content and structure of dyadic interactions. Most research
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Adolescent peer struggles predict accelerated epigenetic aging in midlife Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-05 Joseph P. Allen, Joshua S. Danoff, Meghan A. Costello, Emily L. Loeb, Alida A. Davis, Gabrielle L. Hunt, Simon G. Gregory, Stephanie N. Giamberardino, Jessica J. Connelly
This study examined struggles to establish autonomy and relatedness with peers in adolescence and early adulthood as predictors of advanced epigenetic aging assessed at age 30. Participants (N = 154; 67 male and 87 female) were observed repeatedly, along with close friends and romantic partners, from ages 13 through 29. Observed difficulty establishing close friendships characterized by mutual autonomy
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Advancing research on early autism through an integrated risk and resilience perspective Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-04-05 Isabella C. Stallworthy, Ann S. Masten
To date, a deficit-oriented approach dominates autism spectrum disorder (ASD) research, including studies of infant siblings of children with ASD at high risk (HR) for the disabilities associated with this disorder. Despite scientific advances regarding early ASD-related risk, there remains little systematic investigation of positive development, limiting the scope of research and quite possibly a
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Heterogeneity in caregiving-related early adversity: Creating stable dimensions and subtypes Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-22 Aki Nikolaidis, Charlotte Heleniak, Andrea Fields, Paul A. Bloom, Michelle VanTieghem, Anna Vannucci, Nicolas L. Camacho, Tricia Choy, Lisa Gibson, Chelsea Harmon, Syntia S. Hadis, Ian J. Douglas, Michael P. Milham, Nim Tottenham
Early psychosocial adversities exist at many levels, including caregiving-related, extrafamilial, and sociodemographic, which despite their high interrelatedness may have unique impacts on development. In this paper, we focus on caregiving-related early adversities (crEAs) and parse the heterogeneity of crEAs via data reduction techniques that identify experiential cooccurrences. Using network science
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In her shoes: Partner reflective functioning promotes family-level resilience to maternal depression Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-22 Alison Goldstein, Jessica L. Borelli, Dana Shai
Parental depression has significant implications for family functioning, yet much of the literature does not consider family-level dynamics in investigating individual, parenting and child outcomes. In the current study we apply a new index of couple-level support, partner reflective functioning (RF), or the romantic partner’s ability to consider how the partner’s mental states can guide behavior,
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Measuring early life adversity: A dimensional approach Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-22 Ilana S. Berman, Katie A. McLaughlin, Nim Tottenham, Keith Godfrey, Teresa Seeman, Eric Loucks, Stephen Suomi, Andrea Danese, Margaret A. Sheridan
Exposure to adversity in childhood is associated with elevations in numerous physical and mental health outcomes across the life course. The biological embedding of early experience during periods of developmental plasticity is one pathway that contributes to these associations. Dimensional models specify mechanistic pathways linking different dimensions of adversity to health and well-being outcomes
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Externalizing behavior in preschool children in a South African birth cohort: Predictive pathways in a high-risk context Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Susan Malcolm-Smith, Marilyn T. Lake, Akhona Krwece, Christopher P. du Plooy, Nadia Hoffman, Kirsten A. Donald, Heather J. Zar, Dan J. Stein
Mental health problems often begin in early childhood. However, the associations of various individual and contextual risk factors with mental health in the preschool period are incompletely understood, particularly in low- to middle-income countries (LMICs) where multiple risk factors co-exist. To address this gap, we prospectively followed 981 children in a South African birth cohort, the Drakenstein
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Indirect effects, via parental factors, of income harshness and unpredictability on kindergarteners’ socioemotional functioning Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Zhi Li, Jay Belsky
Drawing on data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort (n = 10,700), we evaluate indirect effects − via parent negative psychology and harsh-inconsistent parenting − of income harshness, unpredictability, and their interaction on kindergarteners’ socioemotional development. Income harshness is operationalized as the typical level of family income-to-needs across four repeated measurements
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Patterns of childhood maltreatment predict emotion processing and regulation in emerging adulthood Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Jennifer M. Warmingham, Erinn B. Duprey, Elizabeth D. Handley, Fred A. Rogosch, Dante Cicchetti
Childhood maltreatment is a potent interpersonal trauma associated with dysregulation of emotional processes relevant to the development of psychopathology. The current study identified prospective links between patterns of maltreatment exposures and dimensions of emotion regulation in emerging adulthood. Participants included 427 individuals (48% Male; 75.9% Black, 10.8% White, 7.5% Hispanic, 6% Other)
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Early-life adversity and risk for depression and anxiety: The role of interpersonal support Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Allison V. Metts, Julia S. Yarrington, Richard Zinbarg, Constance Hammen, Susan Mineka, Craig Enders, Michelle G. Craske
Early-life adversity is a major risk factor for psychopathology, but not all who experience adversity develop psychopathology. The current study evaluated whether the links between child and adolescent adversity and depression and anxiety were described by general benefits and/or buffering effects of interpersonal support. Data from 456 adolescents oversampled on neuroticism over a 5-year period were
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Eight-year trajectories of behavior problems and resilience in children exposed to early-life intimate partner violence: The overlapping and distinct effects of individual factors, maternal characteristics, and early intervention Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Maria M. Galano, Sara F. Stein, Hannah M. Clark, Andrew Grogan-Kaylor, Sandra A. Graham-Bermann
Childhood exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) can have lasting effects on well-being. Children also display resilience following IPV exposure. Yet, little research has prospectively followed changes in both maladaptive and adaptive outcomes in children who experience IPV in early life. The goal of the current study was to investigate how child factors (irritability), trauma history (severity
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The intergenerational effects of paternal incarceration on children’s social and psychological well-being from early childhood to adolescence Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Juan Del Toro, Adam Fine, Ming-Te Wang
The present study sought to unravel the psychological processes through which mass incarceration, specifically paternal incarceration, is negatively affecting the next generation of children. Data came from 4,327 families from 20 cities who participated in a 10-year longitudinal study. Parents and children reported on children’s rule-breaking behaviors and depressive symptoms when they were on average
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Why and how does early adversity influence development? Toward an integrated model of dimensions of environmental experience Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Bruce J. Ellis, Margaret A. Sheridan, Jay Belsky, Katie A. McLaughlin
Two extant frameworks – the harshness-unpredictability model and the threat-deprivation model – attempt to explain which dimensions of adversity have distinct influences on development. These models address, respectively, why, based on a history of natural selection, development operates the way it does across a range of environmental contexts, and how the neural mechanisms that underlie plasticity
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Exploring the meaning of unresolved loss and trauma in more than 1,000 Adult Attachment Interviews Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Lianne Bakkum, Marije L. Verhage, Carlo Schuengel, Robbie Duschinsky, Ilja Cornelisz, Chris van Klaveren, Marinus H. van IJzendoorn, K. Lee Raby, Glenn I. Roisman, Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg, Mirjam Oosterman, Sheri Madigan, R. M. Pasco Fearon, Kazuko Behrens, The Collaboration on Attachment Transmission Synthesis
Unresolved states of mind regarding experiences of loss/abuse (U/d) are identified through lapses in the monitoring of reasoning, discourse, and behavior surrounding loss/abuse in response to the Adult Attachment Interview. Although the coding system for U/d has been widely used for decades, the individual indicators of unresolved loss/abuse have not been validated independently of the development
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Associations among stress and language and socioemotional development in a low-income sample Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Sonya V. Troller-Renfree, Emma R. Hart, Jessica F. Sperber, Nathan A. Fox, Kimberly G. Noble
Stress has been linked with children’s socioemotional problems and lower language scores, particularly among children raised in socioeconomically disadvantaged circumstances. Much of the work examining the relations among stress, language, and socioemotional functioning have relied on assessments of a single dimension of maternal stress. However, stress can stem from different sources, and people may
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Individual differences in the development of youth externalizing problems predict a broad range of adult psychosocial outcomes Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Allison E. Gornik, D. Angus Clark, C. Emily Durbin, Robert A. Zucker
This study examined how youth aggressive and delinquent externalizing problem behaviors across childhood and adolescence are connected to consequential psychosocial life outcomes in adulthood. Using data from a longitudinal, high-risk sample (N = 1069) that assessed children and their parents regularly from early childhood (ages 3–5) through adulthood, multilevel growth factors of externalizing behaviors
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Intergenerational risk and resilience pathways from discrimination and acculturative stress to infant mental health Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Sabrina R. Liu, Curt A. Sandman, Elysia Poggi Davis, Laura M. Glynn
Preconception and prenatal stress impact fetal and infant development, and women of color are disproportionately exposed to sociocultural stressors like discrimination and acculturative stress. However, few studies examine links between mothers’ exposure to these stressors and offspring mental health, or possible mitigating factors. Using linear regression, we tested associations between prenatally
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The interplay between parenting and environmental sensitivity in the prediction of children’s externalizing and internalizing behaviors during COVID-19 Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Francesca Lionetti, Maria Spinelli, Ughetta Moscardino, Silvia Ponzetti, Maria Concetta Garito, Antonio Dellagiulia, Tiziana Aureli, Mirco Fasolo, Michael Pluess
The interplay of parenting and environmental sensitivity on children’s behavioral adjustment during, and immediately after, the COVID-19 lockdown restrictions was investigated in two longitudinal studies involving Italian preschoolers (Study 1, N = 72; 43% girls, M years = 3.82(1.38)) and primary school children (Study 2, N = 94; 55% girls, M years = 9.08(0.56)). Data were collected before and during
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Testing the empirical integration of threat-deprivation and harshness-unpredictability dimensional models of adversity Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Maria Usacheva, Daniel Choe, Siwei Liu, Susan Timmer, Jay Belsky
Recent dimensional models of adversity informed by a neurobiological deficit framework highlights threat and deprivation as core dimensions, whereas models informed by an evolutionary, adaptational and functional framework calls attention to harshness and unpredictability. This report seeks to evaluate an integrative model of threat, deprivation, and unpredictability, drawing on the Fragile Families
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Cognitive performance in children and adolescents with psychopathology traits: A cross-sectional multicohort study in the general population Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-07 Elisabet Blok, Isabel K. Schuurmans, Anne J. Tijburg, Manon Hillegers, Maria E. Koopman-Verhoeff, Ryan L. Muetzel, Henning Tiemeier, Tonya White
Psychopathology and cognitive development are closely related. Assessing the relationship between multiple domains of psychopathology and cognitive performance can elucidate which cognitive tasks are related to specific domains of psychopathology. This can help build theory and improve clinical decision-making in the future. In this study, we included 13,841 children and adolescents drawn from two
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Developmental inflection point for the effect of maternal childhood adversity on children’s mental health from childhood to adolescence: Time-varying effect of gender differences Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-07 Jungeun Olivia Lee, Lei Duan, Woo Jung Lee, Jennifer Rose, Monica L. Oxford, Julie A. Cederbaum
Childhood adversities have a well-established dose–response relationship with later mental health. However, less attention has been given to intergenerational influences. Further, it is unknown how intergenerational influences intersect with children’s developmental stages and gender. The current study examined whether a developmental inflection point exists when the intergenerational influences of
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Simulated nonlinear genetic and environmental dynamics of complex traits Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-03 Michael D. Hunter, Kevin L. McKee, Eric Turkheimer
Genetic studies of complex traits often show disparities in estimated heritability depending on the method used, whether by genomic associations or twin and family studies. We present a simulation of individual genomes with dynamic environmental conditions to consider how linear and nonlinear effects, gene-by-environment interactions, and gene-by-environment correlations may work together to govern
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The development of forms and functions of aggression during early childhood: A temperament-based approach Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-02 Jamie M. Ostrov, Dianna Murray-Close, Kristin J. Perry, Sarah J. Blakely-McClure, Gretchen R. Perhamus, Lauren M. Mutignani, Samantha Kesselring, Gabriela V. Memba, Sarah Probst
This study used a short-term longitudinal design with theoretically derived preregistered hypotheses and analyses to examine the role of temperament in the development of forms (i.e., physical and relational) and functions (i.e., proactive and reactive) of aggressive behavior in early childhood (N = 300, M age = 44.70 months, SD = 4.38, 44% girls). Temperament was measured via behavioral reports of
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A dynamic systems perspective towards executive function development: Susceptibility at both ends for inhibitory control Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-02 Qiong Wu, Karina Jalapa, Soo Jin Han, Dania Tawfiq, Ming Cui
In light of the dynamic systems perspective, the current study expanded existing literature by examining the moderating effect of maternal sensitivity on the quadratic association between infant negative reactivity and future executive function development. Using a longitudinal, multimethod design, we addressed executive function development among preschoolers. This study utilized data from the Family
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Interpregnancy interval and the risk of oppositional defiant disorder in offspring Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-02 Berihun Assefa Dachew, Gavin Pereira, Gizachew Assefa Tessema, Gursimran Kaur Dhamrait, Rosa Alati
The study aimed to investigate the association between interpregnancy interval (IPI) and parent-reported oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) in offspring at 7 and 10 years of age. We used data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), an ongoing population-based longitudinal study based in Bristol, United Kingdom (UK). Data included in the analysis consisted of more than 3200
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The role of perceived threats on mental health, social, and neurocognitive youth outcomes: A multicontextual, person-centered approach Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-03-02 May I. Conley, Jasmine Hernandez, Joeann M. Salvati, Dylan G. Gee, Arielle Baskin-Sommers
Perceived threat in youth’s environments can elevate risk for mental health, social, and neurocognitive difficulties throughout the lifespan. However, few studies examine variability in youth’s perceptions of threat across multiple contexts or evaluate outcomes across multiple domains, ultimately limiting our understanding of specific risks associated with perceived threats in different contexts. This
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Early life adversity, inflammation, and immune function: An initial test of adaptive response models of immunological programming Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-14 Katja Cunningham, Summer Mengelkoch, Jeffrey Gassen, Sarah E. Hill
Much research indicates that exposure to early life adversity (ELA) predicts chronic inflammatory activity, increasing one’s risk of developing diseases of aging later in life. Despite its costs, researchers have proposed that chronic inflammation may be favored in this context because it would help promote immunological vigilance in environments with an elevated risk of infection and injury. Although
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Peer victimization, schooling format, and adolescent internalizing symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic: Between- and within-person associations across ninth grade Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-14 Hannah L. Schacter, Adam J. Hoffman, Alexandra Ehrhardt, Faizun Bakth
The current longitudinal study examined how between-person (BP) differences and within-person (WP) fluctuations in adolescents’ peer victimization and schooling format across ninth grade related to changes in their internalizing symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants were 388 adolescents (61% female; Mage = 14.02) who completed three online surveys, administered 3 months apart, from November
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Characterizing trajectories of anxiety, depression, and criminal offending in male adolescents over the 5 years following their first arrest Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Amanda E. Baker, Namita Tanya Padgaonkar, Adriana Galván, Paul J. Frick, Laurence Steinberg, Elizabeth Cauffman
Youth in the juvenile justice system evince high rates of mental health symptoms, including anxiety and depression. How these symptom profiles change after first contact with the justice system and – importantly – how they are related to re-offending remains unclear. Here, we use latent growth curve modeling to characterize univariate and multivariate growth of anxiety, depression, and re-offending
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Early childhood maltreatment and profiles of resilience among child welfare-involved children Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-07 Susan Yoon, Fei Pei, Jessica Logan, Nathan Helsabeck, Sherry Hamby, Natasha Slesnick
Given the high burden of child maltreatment, there is an urgent need to know more about resilient functioning among those who have experienced maltreatment. The aims of the study were to: 1) identify distinct profiles of resilience across cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and social domains in young children involved in the child welfare system; and 2) examine maltreatment characteristics and family
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Personality-specific pathways from bullying victimization to adolescent alcohol use: a multilevel longitudinal moderated mediation analysis Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-07 Flavie M. Laroque, Elroy Boers, Mohammad H. Afzali, Patricia J. Conrod
Bullying victimization is common in adolescence and has been associated with a broad variety of psychopathology and alcohol use. The present study assessed time-varying associations between bullying victimization and alcohol use through internalizing and externalizing symptoms and whether this indirect association throughout time is moderated by personality. This 5-year longitudinal study (3,800 grade
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The developmental course of loneliness in adolescence: Implications for mental health, educational attainment, and psychosocial functioning Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-03 Timothy Matthews, Pamela Qualter, Bridget T. Bryan, Avshalom Caspi, Andrea Danese, Terrie E. Moffitt, Candice L. Odgers, Lily Strange, Louise Arseneault
The present study examined patterns of stability and change in loneliness across adolescence. Data were drawn from the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) Longitudinal Twin Study, a UK population-representative cohort of 2,232 individuals born in 1994 and 1995. Loneliness was assessed when participants were aged 12 and 18. Loneliness showed modest stability across these ages (r = .25). Behavioral genetic modeling
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Emotional maltreatment and neglect impact neural activation upon exclusion in early and mid-adolescence: An event-related fMRI study Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-02 Charlotte C. Schulz, Kai von Klitzing, Lorenz Deserno, Margaret A. Sheridan, Michael J. Crowley, Margerete J. S. Schoett, Ferdinand Hoffmann, Arno Villringer, Pascal Vrtička, Lars O. White
Child maltreatment gives rise to atypical patterns of social functioning with peers which might be particularly pronounced in early adolescence when peer influence typically peaks. Yet, few neuroimaging studies in adolescents use peer interaction paradigms to parse neural correlates of distinct maltreatment exposures. This fMRI study examines effects of abuse, neglect, and emotional maltreatment (EM)
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Vocalization and physiological hyperarousal in infant–caregiver dyads where the caregiver has elevated anxiety Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-02-02 Celia G. Smith, Emily J. H. Jones, Tony Charman, Kaili Clackson, Farhan U. Mirza, Sam V. Wass
Co-regulation of physiological arousal within the caregiver–child dyad precedes later self-regulation within the individual. Despite the importance of unimpaired self-regulatory development for later adjustment outcomes, little is understood about how early co-regulatory processes can become dysregulated during early life. Aspects of caregiver behavior, such as patterns of anxious speech, may be one
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An exploration of dimensions of early adversity and the development of functional brain network connectivity during adolescence: Implications for trajectories of internalizing symptoms Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Rajpreet Chahal, Jonas G. Miller, Justin P. Yuan, Jessica L. Buthmann, Ian H. Gotlib
Different dimensions of adversity may affect mental health through distinct neurobiological mechanisms, though current supporting evidence consists largely of cross-sectional associations between threat or deprivation and fronto-limbic circuitry. In this exploratory three-wave longitudinal study spanning ages 9–19 years, we examined the associations between experiences of unpredictability, threat,
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Maternal depressive symptoms and child behavior problems: Attachment security as a protective factor Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Paige N. Whittenburg, Jessica A. Stern, Bonnie E. Brett, M. Davis Straske, Jude Cassidy
Maternal depressive symptoms (MDS) have been linked to both child internalizing and externalizing behavior problems. Theory suggests that child attachment security may be a protective factor against the negative effects of MDS. This study examined child attachment security as a buffer of the link between MDS and child internalizing and externalizing behavior problems at two time points in a predominantly
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Caregiver–child proximity as a dimension of early experience Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Whitney Barnett, Clare L. Hansen, Lauren G. Bailes, Kathryn L. Humphreys
Human infancy and early childhood is both a time of heightened brain plasticity and responsivity to the environment as well as a developmental period of dependency on caregivers for survival, nurturance, and stimulation. Across primate species and human evolutionary history, close contact between infants and caregivers is species-expected. As children develop, caregiver–child proximity patterns change
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Developmental pathways from child maltreatment to adolescent pregnancy: A multiple mediational model Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Justin Russotti, Sarah A. Font, Sheree L. Toth, Jennie G. Noll
Adolescent pregnancy (AP) is a significant public health issue. Child maltreatment (CM) represents an established risk factor, yet little is known about the explanatory mechanisms linking the phenomena. Informed by developmental theory, this study prospectively tested seven multi-level, indirect pathways that could plausibly explain the relationship between CM and AP: (1) substance use (polysubstance
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Effects of childhood trauma in psychopathy and response inhibition Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Stacey A. Bedwell, Charlotte Hickman
Childhood trauma is linked to impairments in executive function and working memory, thought to underly psychological disorders including depression and posttraumatic stress disorder. Research demonstrates that childhood trauma can partially mediate posttraumatic stress disorder in those with executive function deficits. Despite a link with executive function deficit, psychopathy as a consequence of
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Exploring everyday state attachment dynamics in middle childhood Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Martine W. F. T. Verhees, Eva Ceulemans, Chloë Finet, Marinus H. van IJzendoorn, Marian J. Bakermans-Kranenburg, Guy Bosmans
The current study explored dynamics of secure state attachment expectations in everyday life in middle childhood, specifically state attachment carry-over and reactivity to experiences of caregiver support in the context of stress. In two independent samples (one community sample, N = 123; one adoption sample, N = 69), children (8–12 years) daily reported on their state attachment for respectively
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Impact of dimensions of early adversity on adult health and functioning: A 2-decade, longitudinal study Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Ellen W. McGinnis, Margaret Sheridan, William E. Copeland
Recent neurodevelopmental and evolutionary theories offer strong theoretical rationales and some empirical evidence to support the importance of specific dimensions of early adversity. However, studies have often been limited by omission of other adversity dimensions, singular outcomes, and short follow up durations. 1,420 participants in the community, Great Smoky Mountains Study, were assessed up
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Latent classes of oppositional defiant disorder in adolescence and prediction to later psychopathology Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Sarah J. Racz, Robert J. McMahon, Gretchen Gudmundsen, Elizabeth McCauley, Ann Vander Stoep
Current conceptualizations of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) place the symptoms of this disorder within three separate but related dimensions (i.e., angry/irritable mood, argumentative/defiant behavior, vindictiveness). Variable-centered models of these dimensions have yielded discrepant findings, limiting their clinical utility. The current study utilized person-centered latent class analysis
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Neither environmental unpredictability nor harshness predict reliance on alloparental care among families in Cebu, Philippines Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Stacy Rosenbaum, Christopher W. Kuzawa, Thomas W. McDade, Sonny Agustin Bechayda, Lee T. Gettler
Alloparental caregiving is key to humans’ highly flexible reproductive strategies. Across species and across societies, alloparental care is more common in harsh and/or unpredictable environments (HUEs). Currently, however, it is unclear whether HUEs predict intra-population variation in alloparental care, or whether early life HUEs might predict later alloparental care use in adulthood, consistent
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Preconception maternal posttraumatic stress and child negative affectivity: Prospectively evaluating the intergenerational impact of trauma Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Danielle A. Swales, Elysia Poggi Davis, Nicole E. Mahrer, Christine M. Guardino, Madeleine U. Shalowitz, Sharon L. Ramey, Chris Dunkel Schetter
The developmental origins of psychopathology begin before birth and perhaps even prior to conception. Understanding the intergenerational transmission of psychopathological risk is critical to identify sensitive windows for prevention and early intervention. Prior research demonstrates that maternal trauma history, typically assessed retrospectively, has adverse consequences for child socioemotional
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Age 18–30 trajectories of binge drinking frequency and prevalence across the past 30 years for men and women: Delineating when and why historical trends reversed across age Development and Psychopathology (IF 4.151) Pub Date : 2022-01-24 Justin Jager, Katherine M. Keyes, Daye Son, Megan E. Patrick, Jonathan Platt, John E. Schulenberg
Historical analyses based on US data indicate that recent cohorts engage in lower binge drinking at age 18 relative to past cohorts, but by the mid- to late-20s the reverse is true: recent cohorts engage in higher binge drinking relative to past cohorts. We pinpoint when – both developmentally and historically – this reversal manifested, examine possible reasons for this reversal, and examine sex convergence