377 results on '"Dodge KA"'
Search Results
2. Neighborhood Danger, Parental Monitoring, Harsh Parenting, and Child Aggression in Nine Countries
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Skinner AT, Lansford JE, Godwin J, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Zelli A, Alampay LP, Al Hassan SM, Bombi AS, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Malone PS, Miranda MC, Oburu P, Pastorelli C., BACCHINI, Dario, Skinner, At, Bacchini, Dario, Lansford, Je, Godwin, J, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Alampay, Lp, Al Hassan, Sm, Bombi, A, Bornstein, Mh, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Di Giunta, L, Dodge, Ka, Malone, P, Miranda, Mc, Oburu, P, and Pastorelli, C.
- Published
- 2014
3. Early Exposure to Parents' Relationship Instability: Implications for Sexual Behavior and Depression in Adolescence.
- Author
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Donahue KL, D'Onofrio BM, Bates JE, Lansford JE, Dodge KA, and Pettit GS
- Abstract
Abstract: Purpose: Examine the effects of the timing of parents'' relationship instability on adolescent sexual and mental health. Methods: We assessed whether the timing of parents'' relationship instability predicted adolescents'' history of sexual partnerships (SP) and major depressive episodes. Multivariate logistic regression analyses controlled for potential mediators related to parenting and the family, including parent knowledge of activities, parent–child relationship quality, number of parents'' post-separation relationship transitions, and number of available caregivers. Participants were assessed annually from age 5 through young adulthood as part of a multisite community sample (N = 585). Results: Participants who experienced parents'' relationship instability before age 5 were more likely to report SP at age 16 (odds ratio [OR]
adj = 1.58) or an episode of major depression during adolescence (ORadj = 2.61). Greater parent knowledge at age 12 decreased the odds of SP at age 16, but none of the hypothesized parenting and family variables statistically mediated the association between early instability and SP or major depressive episode. Conclusions: These results suggest that experiencing parents'' relationship instability in early childhood is associated with sexual behavior and major depression in adolescence, but these associations are not explained by the parenting and family variables included in our analyses. Limitations of the current study and implications for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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4. Behavioral predictors of mental health service utilization in childhood through adolescence.
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Erath SA, Keiley MK, Pettit GS, Lansford JE, Dodge KA, Bates JE, Erath, Stephen A, Keiley, Margaret K, Pettit, Gregory S, Lansford, Jennifer E, Dodge, Kenneth A, and Bates, John E
- Published
- 2009
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5. Mechanisms of gene--environment interaction effects in the development of conduct disorder.
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Dodge KA
- Published
- 2009
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6. On the meaning of meaning when being mean: commentary on Berkowitz's 'on the consideration of automatic as well as controlled psychological processes in aggression'.
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Dodge KA
- Published
- 2008
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7. Deviant by design: risks associated with aggregating deviant peers into group prevention and treatment programs.
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Dishion TJ, Dodge KA, and Lansford JE
- Published
- 2008
8. How can we begin to measure recovery?
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Kenny Paul J, Krantz Barbara, and Dodge Karen
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology ,HV1-9960 - Abstract
Abstract Background There is a lack of consensus in the addiction treatment literature regarding the definition of substance abuse "recovery". Methods This study utilized a review of the literature together with a participatory research design to construct a conceptual model of recovery from the perspectives of addiction treatment professionals, those recovering from addictions, and researchers. Results A multidimensional, comprehensive hypothetical model consisting of seven conceptual domains (physical, biomarker, psychological, psychiatric, chemical dependency, family/social, and spiritual) is presented. Each domain is operationally defined by identifying reliable and valid instruments that may be used to measure the domain. It is proposed that the conceptual model be tested using confirmatory factor analysis. Conclusions If empirically supported, this conceptual model would validate the hypothesized multidimensional nature of recovery and provide a potential means for assessing recovery in future treatment outcome studies.
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- 2010
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9. Perceived mother and father acceptance-rejection predict four unique aspects of child adjustment across nine countries
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Anna Silvia Bombi, Laura Di Giunta, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Dario Bacchini, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Kenneth A. Dodge, Concetta Pastorelli, Sombat Tapanya, Liane Peña Alampay, Lei Chang, Arnaldo Zelli, Diane L. Putnick, Ann T. Skinner, Jennifer E. Lansford, Emma Sorbring, Paul Oburu, Patrick S. Malone, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Marc H. Bornstein, Putnick, Dl, Bornstein, Mh, Lansford, Je, Malone, P, Pastorelli, C, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Alampay, Lp, Al Hassan, Sm, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, A, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Di Giunta, L, Dodge, Ka, Oburu, P., Putnick, Diane L., Bornstein, Marc H., Lansford, Jennifer E., Malone, Patrick S., Pastorelli, Concetta, Skinner, Ann T., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Uribe Tirado, Liliana Maria, Zelli, Arnaldo, Alampay, Liane Peã±a, Al-hassan, Suha M., Bombi, Anna Silvia, Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, Dodge, Kenneth A., and Oburu, Paul
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Male ,Parents ,Philippines ,Developmental psychology ,Fathers ,cross-cultural ,Social desirability bias ,prosocial behavior ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,Mother ,Parenting ,Social distance ,social competence ,behavior problem ,Thailand ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Italy ,Psychological Distance ,Prosocial behavior ,Female ,Social competence ,Rejection, Psychology ,Psychology ,Social Adjustment ,Human ,Parent-Child Relation ,United State ,Adult ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Child Behavior Disorder ,China ,Mothers ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Colombia ,Emotional Adjustment ,Article ,school performance ,Parental acceptance-rejection ,Father ,Humans ,Cross-cultural ,Rejection (Psychology) ,Social Distance ,Philippine ,Sweden ,Jordan ,Kenya ,Cross-cultural studies ,United States ,Country of origin ,Parent ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
Background: It is generally believed that parental rejection of children leads to child maladaptation. However, the specific effects of perceived parental acceptance-rejection on diverse domains of child adjustment and development have been incompletely documented, and whether these effects hold across diverse populations and for mothers and fathers are still open questions. Methods: This study assessed children’s perceptions of mother and father acceptance-rejection in 1,247 families from China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States as antecedent predictors of later internalizing and externalizing behavior problems, school performance, prosocial behavior, and social competence. Results: Higher perceived parental rejection predicted increases in internalizing and externalizing behavior problems and decreases in school performance and prosocial behavior across 3 years controlling for within-wave relations, stability across waves, and parental age, education, and social desirability bias. Patterns of relations ere similar across mothers and fathers and, with a few exceptions, all nine countries. Conclusions: Children’s perceptions of maternal and paternal acceptance-rejection have small but nearly universal effects on multiple aspects of their adjustment and development regardless of the family’s country of origin. Keywords: Parental acceptance-rejection, behavior problems, school performance, prosocial behavior, social competence, cross-cultural.
- Published
- 2014
10. Positive parenting and children's prosocial behavior in eight countries
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Emma Sorbring, Jennifer E. Lansford, Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri, Kenneth A. Dodge, Concetta Pastorelli, Maria Concetta Miranda, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Sombat Tapanya, Marc H. Bornstein, Dario Bacchini, Paul Oburu, Ann T. Skinner, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Liane Peña Alampay, Arnaldo Zelli, Lei Chang, Laura Di Giunta, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Patrick S. Malone, Anna Silvia Bombi, Pastorelli, C, Lansford, J. E., Luengo Kanacri, Bp, Malone, P, Di Giunta, L, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, A, Zelli, A, Miranda, Mc, Bornstein, Mh, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, L. M., Alampay, L. P., Al Hassan, Sm, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Dodge, Ka, Oburu, P, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E., Pastorelli, Concetta, Lansford, Jennifer E., Luengo Kanacri, Bernadette Paula, Malone, Patrick S., Di Giunta, Laura, Bombi, Anna Silvia, Zelli, Arnaldo, Miranda, Maria Concetta, Bornstein, Marc H., Tapanya, Sombat, Uribe Tirado, Liliana Maria, Alampay, Liane Pena, Al-hassan, Suha M., Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Dodge, Kenneth A., Oburu, Paul, Skinner, Ann T., and Sorbring, Emma
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Mother-Child Relation ,United State ,Male ,Positive discipline ,Philippines ,Child Behavior ,050109 social psychology ,late childhood ,cross-national ,Colombia ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Empirical research ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,positive parenting ,prosocial ,cross national ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Social Behavior ,Philippine ,Sweden ,Jordan ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,Positive parenting ,Late childhood ,Thailand ,Kenya ,Mother-Child Relations ,United States ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Prosocial behavior ,Italy ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Psychology ,Positive Youth Development ,Reciprocal ,Human ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background: Research supports the beneficial role of prosocial behaviors on children’s adjustment and successful youth development. Empirical studies point to reciprocal relations between negative parenting and children’s maladjustment, but reciprocal relations between positive parenting and children’s prosocial behavior are understudied. In this study reciprocal relations between two different dimensions of positive parenting (quality of the mother–child relationship and the use of balanced positive discipline) and children’s prosocial behavior were examined in Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States. Methods: Mother–child dyads (N = 1105) provided data over 2 years in two waves (Mage of child in wave 1 = 9.31 years, SD = 0.73; 50% female). Results: A model of reciprocal relations between parenting dimensions, but not among parenting and children’s prosocial behavior, emerged. In particular, children with higher levels of prosocial behavior at age 9 elicited higher levels of mother–child relationship quality in the following year. Conclusions: Findings yielded similar relations across countries, evidencing that being prosocial in late childhood contributes to some degree to the enhancement of a nurturing and involved mother–child relationship in countries that vary widely on sociodemographic profiles and psychological characteristics. Policy and intervention implications of this study are discussed. Keywords: Prosocial behavior; parenting; cross-national; late childhood.
- Published
- 2016
11. A longitudinal examination of mothers' and fathers' social information processing biases and harsh discipline in nine countries
- Author
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Concetta Pastorelli, Kenneth A. Dodge, Darren T. Woodlief, Anna Silvia Bombi, Paul Oburu, Laura Di Giunta, Patrick S. Malone, Dario Bacchini, Liane Peña Alampay, Lei Chang, Arnaldo Zelli, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Ann T. Skinner, Sombat Tapanya, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Emma Sorbring, Jennifer E. Lansford, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Marc H. Bornstein, Lansford, Je, Woodlief, D, Malone, P, Oburu, P, Pastorelli, C, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Alampay, Lp, Al Hassan, Sm, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, A, Bornstein, Mh, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, Di Giunta, L, Dodge, Ka, Lansford, Jennifer E., Woodlief, Darren, Malone, Patrick S., Oburu, Paul, Pastorelli, Concetta, Skinner, Ann T., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Tirado, Liliana Maria Uribe, Zelli, Arnaldo, Al-hassan, Suha M., Alampay, Liane Peã±a, Bombi, Anna Silvia, Bornstein, Marc H., Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, and Dodge, Kenneth A.
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Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Poison control ,Longitudinal Studie ,fathers ,social cognition ,Violence ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Social information processing ,Father ,Child Rearing ,Social cognition ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Mother ,Child rearing ,Parenting ,parental attitudes ,Social perception ,mothers ,child discipline ,Child discipline ,Cross-cultural studies ,Social Perception ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Human - Abstract
This study examined whether parents’ social information processing was related to their subsequent reports of their harsh discipline. Interviews were conducted with mothers (n = 1,277) and fathers (n = 1,030) of children in 1,297 families in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States), initially when children were 7 to 9 years old and again 1 year later. Structural equation models showed that parents’ positive evaluations of aggressive responses to hypothetical childrearing vignettes at Time 1 predicted parents’ self-reported harsh physical and nonphysical discipline at Time 2. This link was consistent across mothers and fathers, and across the nine countries, providing support for the universality of the link between positive evaluations of harsh discipline and parents’ aggressive behavior toward children. The results suggest that international efforts to eliminate violence toward children could target parents’ beliefs about the acceptability and advisability of using harsh physical and nonphysical forms of discipline.
- Published
- 2014
12. Corporal Punishment, Maternal Warmth, and Child Adjustment: A Longitudinal Study in Eight Countries
- Author
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Liane Peña Alampay, Arnaldo Zelli, Lei Chang, Laura Di Giunta, Darren T. Woodlief, Suha M. Al-Hassan, Marc H. Bornstein, Patrick S. Malone, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Ann T. Skinner, Anna Silvia Bombi, Concetta Pastorelli, Sombat Tapanya, Paul Oburu, Chinmayi Sharma, Dario Bacchini, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado, Jennifer E. Lansford, Emma Sorbring, Kenneth A. Dodge, Lansford, Jennifer E., Sharma, Chinmayi, Malone, Patrick S., Woodlief, Darren, Dodge, Kenneth A., Oburu, Paul, Pastorelli, Concetta, Skinner, Ann T., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Tirado, Liliana Maria Uribe, Zelli, Arnaldo, Al-hassan, Suha M., Alampay, Liane Peã±a, Bacchini, Dario, Bombi, Anna Silvia, Bornstein, Marc H., Chang, Lei, Deater-deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, Lansford, Je, Sharma, C, Malone, P, Woodlief, D, Dodge, Ka, Oburu, P, Pastorelli, C, Skinner, At, Sorbring, E, Tapanya, S, Uribe Tirado, Lm, Zelli, A, Al Hassan, Sm, Alampay, Lp, Bombi, A, Bornstein, Mh, Chang, L, Deater Deckard, K, and Di Giunta, L.
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Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Mother-Child Relation ,United State ,Longitudinal study ,Asia ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poison control ,Mothers ,Child Behavior ,Longitudinal Studie ,Anxiety ,Colombia ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Punishment ,Affection ,Injury prevention ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Qualitative Research ,media_common ,Mother ,Aggression ,medicine.disease ,Kenya ,Mother-Child Relations ,United States ,Clinical Psychology ,Italy ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Corporal punishment ,Clinical psychology ,Human - Abstract
Two key tasks facing parents across cultures are managing children’s behaviors (and misbehaviors) and conveying love and affection. Previous research has found that corporal punishment generally is related to worse child adjustment, whereas parental warmth is related to better child adjustment. This study examined whether the association between corporal punishment and child adjustment problems (anxiety and aggression) is moderated by maternal warmth in a diverse set of countries that vary in a number of sociodemographic and psychological ways. Interviews were conducted with 7- to 10-year-old children (N¼1,196; 51% girls) and their mothers in 8 countries: China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan,Kenya, the Philippines, Thailand, and theUnited States. Follow-up interviews were conducted 1 and 2 years later. Corporal punishment was related to increases, and maternal warmth was related to decreases, in children’s anxiety and aggression over time; however, these associations varied somewhat across groups. Maternal warmth moderated the effect of corporal punishment in some countries, with increases in anxiety over time for children whose mothers were high in both warmth and corporal punishment. The findings illustrate the overall association between corporal punishment and child anxiety and aggression as well as patterns specific to particular countries. Results suggest that clinicians across countries should advise parents against using corporal punishment, even in the context of parent–child relationships that are otherwise warm, and should assist parents in finding other ways to manage children’s behaviors. As primary
- Published
- 2014
13. Birth Spacing and Child Maltreatment: Population-Level Estimates for North Carolina.
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Rybińska A, Bai Y, Goodman WB, and Dodge KA
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- Humans, North Carolina epidemiology, Female, Child, Child, Preschool, Male, Risk Factors, Adult, Infant, Pregnancy, Child Abuse statistics & numerical data, Child Abuse prevention & control, Birth Intervals statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
We examine population-level associations between birth spacing and child maltreatment using birth records and child welfare records for 1,099,230 second or higher parity children born in North Carolina between 1997 and 2013. Building upon previous research, administrative data linkages were used to address out-of-state migration and family-level heterogeneity in birth spacing and child maltreatment risk factors. Findings provide the strongest evidence to date that very short birth spacing of zero through 6 months from last birth to the index child's conception is a prenatal predictor of child maltreatment (indexed as child welfare involvement) throughout early childhood. Consequently, information about optimal family planning during the postpartum period should become a standard component of universal and targeted child maltreatment prevention programs. However, challenging previous empirical evidence, this study reports inconsistent results for benefits of additional spacing delay beyond 6 months with regard to child maltreatment risk reduction, especially for children of racial and ethnic minorities. These findings call for further inquiry about the mechanisms driving the connections between birth spacing and Child Protective Services assessments., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
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14. Investigating Longitudinal Trajectories of COVID-19 Disruption: Methodological Challenges and Recommendations.
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Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, and Bornstein MH
- Abstract
Relatively few studies have longitudinally investigated how COVID-19 has disrupted the lives and health of youth beyond the first year of the pandemic. This may be because longitudinal researchers face complex challenges in figuring out how to code time, account for changes in COVID-19 spread, and model longitudinal COVID-19-related trajectories across environmental contexts. This manuscript considers each of these three methodological issues by modeling trajectories of COVID-19 disruption in 1080 youth from 12 cultural groups in nine nations between March 2020-July 2022 using multilevel modeling. Our findings suggest that for studies that attempt to examine cross-cultural longitudinal trajectories during COVID-19, starting such trajectories on March 11, 2020, measuring disruption along 6-month time intervals, capturing COVID-19 spread using death rates and the COVID-19 Health and Containment Index scores, and using modeling methods that combine etic and emic approaches are each especially useful. In offering these suggestions, we hope to start methodological dialogues among longitudinal researchers that ultimately result in the proliferation of research on the longitudinal impacts of COVID-19 that the world so badly needs., (© 2024. Society for Prevention Research.)
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- 2024
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15. Attachment security, environmental adversity, and fast life history behavioral profiles in human adolescents.
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Lu HJ, Lansford JE, Liu YY, Chen BB, Bornstein MH, Skinner AT, Dodge KA, Steinberg L, Deater-Deckard K, Rothenberg WA, Bacchini D, Pastorelli C, Alampay LP, Sorbring E, Gurdal S, Al-Hassan SM, Oburu P, Yotanyamaneewong S, Tapanya S, Di Giunta L, Uribe Tirado LM, and Chang L
- Abstract
One species-general life history (LH) principle posits that challenging childhood environments are coupled with a fast or faster LH strategy and associated behaviors, while secure and stable childhood environments foster behaviors conducive to a slow or slower LH strategy. This coupling between environments and LH strategies is based on the assumption that individuals' internal traits and states are independent of their external surroundings. In reality, individuals respond to external environmental conditions in alignment with their intrinsic vitality, encompassing both physical and mental states. The present study investigated attachment as an internal mental state, examining its role in mediating and moderating the association between external environmental adversity and fast LH strategies. A sample of 1169 adolescents (51% girls) from 9 countries was tracked over 10 years, starting from age 8. The results confirm both mediation and moderation and, for moderation, secure attachment nullified and insecure attachment maintained the environment-LH coupling. These findings suggest that attachment could act as an internal regulator, disrupting the contingent coupling between environmental adversity and a faster pace of life, consequently decelerating human LH.
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- 2024
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16. Intergenerational effects of a casino-funded family transfer program on educational outcomes in an American Indian community.
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Bruckner TA, Bustos B, Dodge KA, Lansford JE, Odgers CL, and Copeland WE
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- Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Intergenerational Relations, Mathematics, Mothers, Poverty, Reading, Rural Population, Educational Status, Indians, North American, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
Cash transfer policies have been widely discussed as mechanisms to curb intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic disadvantage. In this paper, we take advantage of a large casino-funded family transfer program introduced in a Southeastern American Indian Tribe to generate difference-in-difference estimates of the link between children's cash transfer exposure and third grade math and reading test scores of their offspring. Here we show greater math (0.25 standard deviation [SD], p =.0148, 95% Confidence Interval [CI]: 0.05, 0.45) and reading (0.28 SD, p = .0066, 95% CI: 0.08, 0.49) scores among American Indian students whose mother was exposed ten years longer than other American Indian students to the cash transfer during her childhood (or relative to the non-American Indian student referent group). Exploratory analyses find that a mother's decision to pursue higher education and delay fertility appears to explain some, but not all, of the relation between cash transfers and children's test scores. In this rural population, large cash transfers have the potential to reduce intergenerational cycles of poverty-related educational outcomes., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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17. Population mental health science: Guiding principles and initial agenda.
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Dodge KA, Prinstein MJ, Evans AC, Ahuvia IL, Alvarez K, Beidas RS, Brown AJ, Cuijpers P, Denton EG, Hoagwood KE, Johnson C, Kazdin AE, McDanal R, Metzger IW, Rowley SN, Schleider J, and Shaw DS
- Subjects
- Humans, Population Health, Mental Health Services organization & administration, Mental Health
- Abstract
A recent American Psychological Association Summit provided an urgent call to transform psychological science and practice away from a solely individual-level focus to become accountable for population-level impact on health and mental health. A population focus ensures the mental health of all children, adolescents, and adults and the elimination of inequities across groups. Science must guide three components of this transformation. First, effective individual-level interventions must be scaled up to the population level using principles from implementation science, investing in novel intervention delivery systems (e.g., online, mobile application, text, interactive voice response, and machine learning-based), harnessing the strength of diverse providers, and forging culturally informed adaptations. Second, policy-driven community-level interventions must be innovated and tested, such as public efforts to promote physical activity, public policies to support families in early life, and regulation of corporal punishment in schools. Third, transformation is needed to create a new system of universal primary care for mental health, based on models such as Family Connects, Triple P, PROmoting School-community-university Partnerships to Enhance Resilience, Communities That Care, and the Early Childhood Collaborative of the Pittsburgh Study. This new system must incorporate valid measurement, universal screening, and a community-based infrastructure for service delivery. Addressing tasks ahead, including scientific creativity and discovery, rigorous evaluation, and community accountability, will lead to a comprehensive strategic plan to shape the emergent field of public mental health. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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18. Cultural values, parenting, and child adjustment in the United States.
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Breiner K, Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Steinberg L, Bornstein MH, Deater-Deckard K, Dodge KA, and Rothenberg WA
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- Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Adaptation, Psychological, Internal-External Control, Social Adjustment, Social Conformity, United States ethnology, Black or African American psychology, White psychology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Parenting ethnology, Parenting psychology, Social Values
- Abstract
We examined whether cultural values, conformity and parenting behaviours were related to child adjustment in middle childhood in the United States. White, Black and Latino mothers (n = 273), fathers (n = 182) and their children (n = 272) reported on parental individualism and collectivism, conformity values, parental warmth, monitoring, family obligation expectations, and child internalising and externalising behaviours. Mean differences, bivariate correlations and multiple regression analyses were performed on variables of interest. Collectivism in mothers and fathers was associated with family obligation expectations and parental warmth. Fathers with higher conformity values had higher expectations of children's family obligations. Child internalising and externalising behaviours were greater when Latino families subscribed to individualistic values. These results are discussed in the context of cultural values, protective and promotive factors of behaviour, and race/ethnicity in the United States., (© 2024 International Union of Psychological Science.)
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- 2024
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19. Individualism, collectivism and conformity in nine countries: Relations with parenting and child adjustment.
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Gorla L, Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Breiner K, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Santona A, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, and Uribe Tirado LM
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Adult, Individuality, Social Adjustment, Parent-Child Relations ethnology, Social Values, Parenting psychology, Parenting ethnology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Social Conformity
- Abstract
This study investigated how individualism, collectivism and conformity are associated with parenting and child adjustment in 1297 families with 10-year-old children from 13 cultural groups in nine countries. With multilevel models disaggregating between- and within-culture effects, we examined between- and within-culture associations between maternal and paternal cultural values, parenting dimensions and children's adjustment. Mothers from cultures endorsing higher collectivism and fathers from cultures endorsing lower individualism engage more frequently in warm parenting behaviours. Mothers and fathers with higher-than-average collectivism in their culture reported higher parent warmth and expectations for children's family obligations. Mothers with higher-than-average collectivism in their cultures more frequently reported warm parenting and fewer externalising problems in children, whereas mothers with higher-than-average individualism in their culture reported more child adjustment problems. Mothers with higher-than-average conformity values in their culture reported more father-displays of warmth and greater mother-reported expectations for children's family obligations. Fathers with higher-than-average individualism in their culture reported setting more rules and soliciting more knowledge about their children's whereabouts. Fathers who endorsed higher-than-average conformity in their culture displayed more warmth and expectations for children's family obligations and granted them more autonomy. Being connected to an interdependent, cohesive group appears to relate to parenting and children's adjustment., (© 2024 International Union of Psychological Science.)
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- 2024
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20. Investigating if high-quality kindergarten teachers sustain the pre-K boost to children's emergent literacy skill development in North Carolina.
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Carr RC, Jenkins JM, Watts TW, Peisner-Feinberg ES, and Dodge KA
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- Humans, North Carolina, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Literacy, Child Development physiology, Early Intervention, Educational standards, Early Intervention, Educational methods, School Teachers
- Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that high-quality kindergarten teachers sustain and amplify the skill development of children who participated in North Carolina's NC Pre-K program during the previous year, compared to matched non-participants (N = 17,330; 42% African American, 40% Non-Hispanic White, 15% Hispanic; 51% male; M
age = 4.5 years at fall of pre-K). Kindergarten teacher quality was measured using a "value-added" approach. NC Pre-K participants outperformed non-participants in the fall of kindergarten (β = .22) and 11% of this boost remained evident by the spring of kindergarten. Higher value-added teachers promoted the skill development of all children (β = .30 in the spring) but did not differentially benefit the skill development of former NC Pre-K participants compared to non-participants., (© 2024 The Authors. Child Development © 2024 Society for Research in Child Development.)- Published
- 2024
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21. Adolescents' relationships with parents and romantic partners in eight countries.
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Gorla L, Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adolescent, Parenting psychology, Object Attachment, Personal Satisfaction, Colombia, Thailand, Kenya, China, United States, Interpersonal Relations, Philippines, Sweden, Communication, Italy, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Introduction: Creating romantic relationships characterized by high-quality, satisfaction, few conflicts, and reasoning strategies to handle conflicts is an important developmental task for adolescents connected to the relational models they receive from their parents. This study examines how parent-adolescent conflicts, attachment, positive parenting, and communication are related to adolescents' romantic relationship quality, satisfaction, conflicts, and management., Method: We interviewed 311 adolescents at two time points (females = 52%, ages 15 and 17) in eight countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States). Generalized and linear mixed models were run considering the participants' nesting within countries., Results: Adolescents with negative conflicts with their parents reported low romantic relationship quality and satisfaction and high conflicts with their romantic partners. Adolescents experiencing an anxious attachment to their parents reported low romantic relationship quality, while adolescents with positive parenting showed high romantic relationship satisfaction. However, no association between parent-adolescent relationships and conflict management skills involving reasoning with the partner was found. No associations of parent-adolescent communication with romantic relationship dimensions emerged, nor was there any effect of the country on romantic relationship quality or satisfaction., Conclusion: These results stress the relevance of parent-adolescent conflicts and attachment as factors connected to how adolescents experience romantic relationships., (© 2024 Foundation for Professionals in Services to Adolescents.)
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- 2024
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22. Bidirectional longitudinal associations between parental self-efficacy and child rule-breaking behaviours: A random-intercept cross-lagged panel study.
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Remondi C, Gerbino M, Cirimele F, Thartori E, Bacchini D, Di Giunta L, Lansford JE, Dodge KA, and Pastorelli C
- Abstract
Parental self-efficacy (PSE) is a pivotal determinant of change in children's adjustment. However, not only has previous research shown that PSE plays a protective role for children's rule-breaking (RB) behaviours (i.e., parent-driven process), but RB also can reduce parents' PSE over-time (i.e., child-driven process). This study examined the bidirectional longitudinal associations between PSE and RB behaviours by disentangling maternal from paternal influences and between- from within-person effects. In the present seven-wave longitudinal study involving 200 Italian children (T1: M
age = 9.80, SD = 0.65; 50.5% girls), their mothers (N = 200) and fathers (N = 190), two random-intercept cross-lagged panel models (one for mothers and one for fathers) were used to explore whether: (a) stable parts of PSE and RB were related to each other, (b) higher levels of PSE were associated with lower levels of RB at a given time point, and (c) higher levels of PSE at a given time point were associated with future lower levels of RB. Results provided evidence both for a parent- and a child-driven process between mothers' PSE and children's RB behaviours. However, these results were not replicated for fathers. Implications are discussed., (© 2024 International Union of Psychological Science.)- Published
- 2024
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23. Developmental Trajectories of Parental Self-Efficacy as Children Transition to Adolescence in Nine Countries: Latent Growth Curve Analyses.
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Buchanan CM, Glatz T, Selçuk Ş, Skinner AT, Lansford JE, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, and Alampay LP
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- Female, Child, Humans, Adolescent, Infant, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Parents, Mothers, Parenting, Self Efficacy
- Abstract
Little is known about the developmental trajectories of parental self-efficacy as children transition into adolescence. This study examined parental self-efficacy among mothers and fathers over 3 1/2 years representing this transition, and whether the level and developmental trajectory of parental self-efficacy varied by cultural group. Data were drawn from three waves of the Parenting Across Cultures (PAC) project, a large-scale longitudinal, cross-cultural study, and included 1178 mothers and 1041 fathers of children who averaged 9.72 years of age at T1 (51.2% girls). Parents were from nine countries (12 ethnic/cultural groups), which were categorized into those with a predominant collectivistic (i.e., China, Kenya, Philippines, Thailand, Colombia, and Jordan) or individualistic (i.e., Italy, Sweden, and USA) cultural orientation based on Hofstede's Individualism Index (Hofstede Insights, 2021). Latent growth curve analyses supported the hypothesis that parental self-efficacy would decline as children transition into adolescence only for parents from more individualistic countries; parental self-efficacy increased over the same years among parents from more collectivistic countries. Secondary exploratory analyses showed that some demographic characteristics predicted the level and trajectory of parental self-efficacy differently for parents in more individualistic and more collectivistic countries. Results suggest that declines in parental self-efficacy documented in previous research are culturally influenced., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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24. Unique Profiles of Postpartum Family Needs and Evidence of Racial and Ethnic Disparities: Insights from Community Implementation of Family Connects.
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Bai Y, Milojevich H, Dodge KA, Benjamin Goodman W, and O'Donnell K
- Abstract
Objectives: To delineate specific family needs during the postpartum period using data from Family Connects (FC), a universal home-visiting initiative, and to scrutinize potential racial and ethnic disparities in these needs., Method: FC implementation data spanned from July 1, 2009, to August 31, 2021, in seven counties across the USA. Data encompassed nurse-led in-home assessments for 34,119 families. Nurses evaluated needs across four domains (healthcare, parenting/childcare, safe home, and parent support) comprising 12 risk factors., Findings: Overall, families reported high levels of need, and community connections were facilitated for 57% of visited families. Significant differences in need profiles between whites and minority groups were revealed, reflecting both disparity and uniqueness. Employing the Oaxaca decomposition approach, we found that racial/ethnic disparities in socioeconomic attributes were associated with racial/ethnic gaps in the need profiles., Conclusions: The event of giving birth is both high risk and high opportunity for preventive intervention. Home-visiting programs, as an evidence-based approach, must address the diverse spectrum of familial needs comprehensively., (© 2024. W. Montague Cobb-NMA Health Institute.)
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- 2024
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25. Intraindividual variability in parental acceptance-rejection predicts externalizing and internalizing symptoms across childhood/adolescence in nine countries.
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Folker AE, Deater-Deckard K, Lansford JE, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Rothenberg WA, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, and Chang L
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- Child, Female, Humans, Adolescent, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
Parenting that is high in rejection and low in acceptance is associated with higher levels of internalizing (INT) and externalizing (EXT) problems in children and adolescents. These symptoms develop and can increase in severity to negatively impact adolescents' social, academic, and emotional functioning. However, there are two major gaps in the extant literature: (a) nearly all prior research has focused on between-person differences in acceptance/rejection at the expense of examining intraindividual variability (IIV) across time in acceptance/rejection; and (b) no prior studies examine IIV in acceptance/rejection in diverse international samples. The present study utilized six waves of data with 1,199 adolescents' families living in nine countries from the Parenting Across Cultures study to test the hypotheses that (1) higher amounts of youth IIV in mother acceptance/rejection predict higher internalizing and (2) externalizing symptoms, and (3) that higher youth IIV in father acceptance/rejection predict higher internalizing, and (4) externalizing symptoms. Meta-analytic techniques indicated a significant, positive effect of IIV in child-reported mother and father acceptance/rejection on adolescent externalizing symptoms, and a significant positive effect of IIV in father acceptance/rejection on internalizing symptoms. The weighted effect for mother acceptance/rejection on internalizing symptoms was not statistically significant. Additionally, there was significant heterogeneity in all meta-analytic estimates. More variability over time in experiences of parental acceptance/rejection predicts internalizing and externalizing symptoms as children transition into adolescence, and this effect is present across multiple diverse samples. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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26. Intergenerational Effects of the Fast Track Intervention on Next-Generation Child Outcomes: A Preregistered Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Godwin JW, Dodge KA, Copeland WE, Odgers CL, McMahon RJ, and Rybinska A
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- Adult, Child, Humans, Mental Health, Ambulatory Care, Behavior Therapy, Control Groups, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Objective: The authors sought to determine whether the Fast Track mental health intervention delivered to individuals in childhood decreased mental health problems and the need for health services among the children of these individuals., Methods: The authors examined whether Fast Track assignment in one generation of children (generation 2; G2) from grades 1 through 10 reduced parent-reported mental health problems and health services use in these children's children (generation 3; G3) 18 years later relative to a control group. The Fast Track intervention blended parent behavior-management training, child social-cognitive skills tutoring, home visits, and classroom social-ecology changes across grades 1-10 to ameliorate emerging conduct problems among the G2 children. For this study, 1,057 G3 children of Fast Track participants (N=581 intervention group, N=476 control group) were evaluated., Results: G3 children of G2 parents who were randomized to the Fast Track intervention group used fewer general inpatient services and fewer inpatient or outpatient mental health services compared with G3 children of G2 parents randomized to the control group. Some of these effects were mediated: randomization to Fast Track predicted fewer internalizing problems and less use of corporal punishment among G2 adults at age 25, which subsequently predicted less general inpatient service use and outpatient mental health service use among the G3 children by the time the G2 parents were 34 years old. There were no significant differences between G3 children from these two groups on the use of other health services or on mental health measures., Conclusions: Fast Track was associated with lower use of general inpatient services and inpatient and outpatient mental health services intergenerationally, but effects on parent-reported mental health of the children were not apparent across generations. Investing in interventions for the mental health of children could reduce service use burdens across generations., Competing Interests: Drs. Dodge and McMahon have royalty agreements with Guilford Publications. The other authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.
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- 2024
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27. Intergenerational Effects of a Family Cash Transfer on the Home Environment.
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Copeland WE, Tong G, Shanahan L, Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Godwin JW, Rybińska A, Odgers CL, and Dodge KA
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- Child, Adult, Humans, Income, Parents, Home Environment, Substance-Related Disorders
- Abstract
Objective: A natural experiment that provided income supplements to families has been associated with beneficial outcomes for children that persisted into adulthood. The children in this study are now adults, and many are parents., Method: The study builds on the longitudinal, representative Great Smoky Mountains study conducted from 1993 to 2020. At follow-up in their late 30s, 1,094 of the 1,348 living participants (81.2%) were assessed. Of these participants (67.6%), 739 were parents. A tribe in the area implemented a cash transfer program of approximately $5,000 annually per person to every tribal member based on the profits received from operating a casino. Ten aspects of the home environment of participants were assessed (eg, family chaos, substance use, and food insecurity) as well as a composite measure across all home environment indicators. The proposed analyses were preregistered (https://osf.io/ex638)., Results: Of the 739 parents assessed, 192 (26.0%) were American Indians. Parents whose families received cash transfers during childhood did not differ from parents whose families did not receive cash transfers on any of the home environment indicators or the composite measure. At the same time, there was little evidence of elevated risk for participants in either group in measures of parental mental health, substance use, and violence., Conclusion: A family cash transfer in childhood that had long-term effects on individual functioning did not impact the home environment of participants who became parents. Rather, parents in both groups were providing home environments generally conducive to their children's growth and development., Study Preregistration Information: Intergenerational Effects of a Family Cash Transfer on the Home Environment; https://osf.io/; ex638., (Copyright © 2023 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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28. How a defensive mindset develops from early adverse experiences and guides antisocial outcomes.
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Dodge KA
- Abstract
Dante Cicchetti has had a lasting impact on our understanding of the development of externalizing psychopathology through at least two seminal contributions, including establishment of the field of developmental psychopathology and assertion of the hypothesis that early physical abuse and neglect trigger a cascade of maladaptive outcomes across the life course. These ideas have guided a program of research on children's deviant social information processing and defensive mindset as the psychological mechanisms through which early physical abuse leads to long-term psychopathology. Longitudinal studies following children from early life through mid-adulthood show that physical abuse in the first five years of life leads children to adopt a defensive mindset that, in turn, cascades into long-term outcomes of externalizing psychopathology, incarceration, and dysfunction. Cicchetti's ideas have also guided the development of preventive interventions to interrupt this life course.
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- 2024
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29. Kindergarten conduct problems are associated with monetized outcomes in adolescence and adulthood.
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Goulter N, Hur YS, Jones DE, Godwin J, McMahon RJ, Dodge KA, Lansford JE, Lochman JE, Bates JE, Pettit GS, and Crowley DM
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- Adult, Child, Humans, Male, Adolescent, Female, United States epidemiology, Longitudinal Studies, Self Report, Educational Status, Conduct Disorder epidemiology, Problem Behavior
- Abstract
Background: Across several sites in the United States, we examined whether kindergarten conduct problems among mostly population-representative samples of children were associated with increased criminal and related (criminal + lost offender productivity + victim; described as criminal + victim hereafter) costs across adolescence and adulthood, as well as government and medical services costs in adulthood., Methods: Participants (N = 1,339) were from two multisite longitudinal studies: Fast Track (n = 754) and the Child Development Project (n = 585). Parents and teachers reported on kindergarten conduct problems, administrative and national database records yielded indexes of criminal offending, and participants self-reported their government and medical service use. Outcomes were assigned costs, and significant associations were adjusted for inflation to determine USD 2020 costs., Results: A 1SD increase in kindergarten conduct problems was associated with a $21,934 increase in adolescent criminal + victim costs, a $63,998 increase in adult criminal + victim costs, a $12,753 increase in medical services costs, and a $146,279 increase in total costs. In the male sample, a 1SD increase in kindergarten conduct problems was associated with a $28,530 increase in adolescent criminal + victim costs, a $58,872 increase in adult criminal + victim costs, and a $144,140 increase in total costs. In the female sample, a 1SD increase in kindergarten conduct problems was associated with a $15,481 increase in adolescent criminal + victim costs, a $62,916 increase in adult criminal + victim costs, a $24,105 increase in medical services costs, and a $144,823 increase in total costs., Conclusions: This investigation provides evidence of the long-term costs associated with early-starting conduct problems, which is important information that can be used by policymakers to support research and programs investing in a strong start for children., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.)
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- 2024
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30. Family cash transfers in childhood and birthing persons and birth outcomes later in life.
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Bustos B, Lopez M, Dodge KA, Lansford JE, Copeland WE, Odgers CL, and Bruckner TA
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Much literature in the US documents an intergenerational transmission of birthing person and perinatal morbidity in socioeconomically disadvantaged groups. A separate line of work indicates that family cash transfers may improve life chances of low-income families well into adulthood. By exploiting a quasi-random natural experiment of a large family cash transfer among a southeastern American Indian (AI) tribe in rural North Carolina, we examine whether a "perturbation" in socioeconomic status during childhood improves birthing person/perinatal outcomes when they become parents themselves. We acquired birth records on 6805 AI and non-AI infants born from 1995 to 2018. Regression methods to examine effect modification tested whether the birthing person's American Indian (AI) status and exposure to the family cash transfer during their childhood years corresponds with improvements in birthing person and perinatal outcomes. Findings show an increase in age at childbearing (coef: 0.15 years, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.05, 0.25) and a decrease in pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI; coef: -0.42, 95% CI: -0.76, -0.09) with increased duration of cash transfer exposure during childhood. The odds of large-for-gestational age at delivery, as well as mean infant birthweight, is also reduced among AI births whose birthing person had relatively longer duration of exposure to the cash transfer. We, however, observe no relation with other birthing person/perinatal outcomes (e.g., tobacco use during pregnancy, preterm birth). In this rural AI population, cash transfers in one generation correspond with improved birthing person and infant health in the next generation., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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31. Compliance with Health Recommendations and Vaccine Hesitancy During the COVID Pandemic in Nine Countries.
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Lansford JE, Rothenberg WA, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Morgenstern G, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, and Uribe Tirado LM
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Ecosystem, Pandemics prevention & control, Vaccination Hesitancy, China, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Longitudinal data from the Parenting Across Cultures study of children, mothers, and fathers in 12 cultural groups in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the USA; N = 1331 families) were used to understand predictors of compliance with COVID-19 mitigation strategies and vaccine hesitancy. Confidence in government responses to the COVID pandemic was also examined as a potential moderator of links between pre-COVID risk factors and compliance with COVID mitigation strategies and vaccine hesitancy. Greater confidence in government responses to the COVID pandemic was associated with greater compliance with COVID mitigation strategies and less vaccine hesitancy across cultures and reporters. Pre-COVID financial strain and family stress were less consistent predictors of compliance with COVID mitigation strategies and vaccine hesitancy than confidence in government responses to the pandemic. Findings suggest the importance of bolstering confidence in government responses to future human ecosystem disruptions, perhaps through consistent, clear, non-partisan messaging and transparency in acknowledging limitations and admitting mistakes to inspire compliance with government and public health recommendations., (© 2022. Society for Prevention Research.)
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- 2024
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32. How adolescents' lives were disrupted over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic: A longitudinal investigation in 12 cultural groups in 9 nations from March 2020 to July 2022.
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Rothenberg WA, Skinner AT, Lansford JE, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Junla D, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Abstract
It is unclear how much adolescents' lives were disrupted throughout the COVID-19 pandemic or what risk factors predicted such disruption. To answer these questions, 1,080 adolescents in 9 nations were surveyed 5 times from March 2020 to July 2022. Rates of adolescent COVID-19 life disruption were stable and high. Adolescents who, compared to their peers, lived in nations with higher national COVID-19 death rates, lived in nations with less stringent COVID-19 mitigation strategies, had less confidence in their government's response to COVID-19, complied at higher rates with COVID-19 control measures, experienced the death of someone they knew due to COVID-19, or experienced more internalizing, externalizing, and smoking problems reported more life disruption due to COVID-19 during part or all of the pandemic. Additionally, when, compared to their typical levels of functioning, adolescents experienced spikes in national death rates, experienced less stringent COVID-19 mitigation measures, experienced less confidence in government response to the COVID-19 pandemic, complied at higher rates with COVID-19 control measures, experienced more internalizing problems, or smoked more at various periods during the pandemic, they also experienced more COVID-19 life disruption. Collectively, these findings provide new insights that policymakers can use to prevent the disruption of adolescents' lives in future pandemics.
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- 2024
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33. Can Peers Help Sustain the Positive Effects of an Early Childhood Mathematics Intervention?
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Botvin C, Jenkins JM, Carr RC, Dodge KA, Clements D, Sarama J, and Watts TW
- Abstract
Our study assessed whether the peer environment in kindergarten and first grade affected student learning following an early mathematics intervention. We leveraged longitudinal data from a cluster-RCT to examine whether math achievement in kindergarten ( n = 1,218) and first grade ( n = 1,126) was affected by either the share of high-achieving classmates or the proportion of classroom peers who received a preschool math curriculum intervention. Analyses indicated that exposure to treated peers in first grade, but not kindergarten, was significantly associated with small gains in end-of-year achievement. Some analyses also suggested that average peer math achievement was generally positively related to children's kindergarten and first-grade achievement across conditions, though these results were less robust. We did not find consistent evidence to suggest that the proportion of treated peers coincided with better teaching practices. Taken together, these findings suggest that classroom peer effects may play only a limited role in sustaining early intervention effects.
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- 2024
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34. Patterns of Singlehood, Cohabitation, and Marriage in Early Adulthood in Relation to Well-being in Established Adulthood.
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Lansford JE, Rauer A, Pettit GS, Godwin J, Bates JE, and Dodge KA
- Abstract
In a cohort followed from late adolescence until established adulthood, this study examined how singlehood, cohabitation, and marriage are related to well-being at different ages across early adulthood and into established adulthood.Participants ( N = 585) from three U.S. sites reported their marital and residential status at ages 18, 23, 28, and 34, when they also reported on physical, psychological, and social indicators of well-being. Findings suggest that being married compared to single earlier in adulthood is related to several indicators of better age 34 well-being. Although single and married participants did not differ on all indicators of well-being, married participants across several ages had less problematic substance use, better health, more economic security, and fewer internalizing and externalizing problems at age 34. Cohabiting participants' well-being was more similar to the well-being of the single than married participants on most indicators (and on all indicators by age 34). Findings did not differ by gender. The findings suggest that despite normative increases in singlehood and cohabitation, the present cohort shows that marriage continued to be associated with well-being at age 34., Competing Interests: Disclosure Statement:The authors report there are no competing interests to declare.
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- 2024
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35. The developmental trends of parental self-efficacy and adolescents' rule-breaking behaviors in the Italian context: A 7-wave latent growth curve study.
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Remondi C, Gerbino M, Zuffianò A, Pastorelli C, Thartori E, Bacchini D, Di Giunta L, Lunetti C, Favini A, Lansford JE, and Dodge KA
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Child, Adolescent, Male, Parents, Mothers, Parenting, Parent-Child Relations, Longitudinal Studies, Self Efficacy, Adolescent Behavior
- Abstract
Parental self-efficacy (PSE) captures parents' beliefs in their ability to perform the parenting role successfully and to handle pivotal issues of specific developmental periods. Although previous studies have shown that, across the transition to adolescence, parents show decreasing levels of PSE while adolescents exhibit increasing engagement in rule-breaking (RB) behaviors, there is a paucity of studies investigating whether and how changes in PSE are related to late adolescents' RB behaviors across development. The present study examined the developmental trends of PSE among Italian mothers and fathers over seven waves (representing children's transition from late childhood to late adolescence; approximately from 9 to 18 years old) as well as the longitudinal associations between PSE and RB behaviors during late adolescence. Data were drawn from seven waves of the Parenting Across Cultures (PAC) project, a large-scale longitudinal, cross-cultural study, and included 200 Italian children (MAgeAtTime1 = 9.80, SD = 0.65; 50.5% girls) and their parents (200 mothers; 190 fathers). PSE was measured across all seven time-points (from T1 to T7), while adolescents' RB behaviors were measured at the first and last assessment (T1 and T7). Results of univariate latent growth models showed a cubic trend of mothers' PSE, which revealed a decreasing pattern characterized initially by a slight decline, followed by a rebound before continuously decreasing. By contrast, fathers' PSE followed a linear decrease over time. Finally, our findings evidenced that only the slope of mothers' PSE negatively predicted adolescents' RB behaviors at T7, implying that mothers who maintained higher levels of PSE over time had children who later engaged in lower RB behaviors. The study implications are discussed., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Remondi et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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36. Predictors of problematic adult alcohol, cannabis, and other substance use: A longitudinal study of two samples.
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Lansford JE, Goulter N, Godwin J, McMahon RJ, Dodge KA, Crowley M, Pettit GS, Bates JE, and Lochman JE
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- Child, Female, Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Male, Longitudinal Studies, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Risk Factors, Cannabis, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
This study examined whether a key set of adolescent and early adulthood risk factors predicts problematic alcohol, cannabis, and other substance use in established adulthood. Two independent samples from the Child Development Project (CDP; n = 585; 48% girls; 81% White, 17% Black, 2% other race/ethnicity) and Fast Track (FT; n = 463; 45% girls; 52% White, 43% Black, 5% other race/ethnicity) were recruited in childhood and followed through age 34 (CDP) or 32 (FT). Predictors of substance use were assessed in adolescence based on adolescent and parent reports and in early adulthood based on adult self-reports. Adults reported their own problematic substance use in established adulthood. In both samples, more risk factors from adolescence and early adulthood predicted problematic alcohol use in established adulthood (compared to problematic cannabis use and other substance use). Externalizing behaviors and prior substance use in early adulthood were consistent predictors of problematic alcohol and cannabis misuse in established adulthood across samples; other predictors were specific to the sample and type of substance misuse. Prevention efforts might benefit from tailoring to address risk factors for specific substances, but prioritizing prevention of externalizing behaviors holds promise for preventing both alcohol and cannabis misuse in established adulthood.
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- 2023
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37. Predictive Validity of Adolescent Callous-Unemotional Traits and Conduct Problems with Respect to Adult Outcomes: High- and Low-Risk Samples.
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Goulter N, Oberth C, McMahon RJ, Lansford JE, Dodge KA, Crowley DM, Bates JE, and Pettit GS
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- Child, Humans, Adult, Adolescent, Prospective Studies, Antisocial Personality Disorder diagnosis, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Risk, Emotions, Conduct Disorder diagnosis, Conduct Disorder psychology, Problem Behavior
- Abstract
Current understanding of the predictive validity of callous-unemotional (CU) traits is limited by (a) the focus on externalizing psychopathology and antisocial behaviors, (b) a lack of long-term prospective longitudinal data, (c) samples comprised of high-risk or low-risk individuals. We tested whether adolescent CU traits and conduct problems were associated with theoretically relevant adult outcomes 12-18 years later. Participants were drawn from two studies: higher-risk Fast Track (FT; n = 754) and lower-risk Child Development Project (CDP; n = 585). FT: conduct problems positively predicted externalizing and internalizing psychopathology and partner violence, and negatively predicted health, wellbeing, and education. Three conduct problems × CU traits interaction effects were also found. CDP: CU traits positively predicted depression and negatively predicted health and education; conduct problems positively predicted externalizing and internalizing psychopathology and substance use, and negatively predicted wellbeing. CU traits did not provide incremental predictive validity for multiple adult outcomes relative to conduct problems., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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38. Predicting Adolescent Mental Health Outcomes Across Cultures: A Machine Learning Approach.
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Rothenberg WA, Bizzego A, Esposito G, Lansford JE, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, and Alampay LP
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- Child, Humans, Adolescent, Parenting psychology, Mental Health, Risk Factors, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Adolescent Behavior psychology
- Abstract
Adolescent mental health problems are rising rapidly around the world. To combat this rise, clinicians and policymakers need to know which risk factors matter most in predicting poor adolescent mental health. Theory-driven research has identified numerous risk factors that predict adolescent mental health problems but has difficulty distilling and replicating these findings. Data-driven machine learning methods can distill risk factors and replicate findings but have difficulty interpreting findings because these methods are atheoretical. This study demonstrates how data- and theory-driven methods can be integrated to identify the most important preadolescent risk factors in predicting adolescent mental health. Machine learning models examined which of 79 variables assessed at age 10 were the most important predictors of adolescent mental health at ages 13 and 17. These models were examined in a sample of 1176 families with adolescents from nine nations. Machine learning models accurately classified 78% of adolescents who were above-median in age 13 internalizing behavior, 77.3% who were above-median in age 13 externalizing behavior, 73.2% who were above-median in age 17 externalizing behavior, and 60.6% who were above-median in age 17 internalizing behavior. Age 10 measures of youth externalizing and internalizing behavior were the most important predictors of age 13 and 17 externalizing/internalizing behavior, followed by family context variables, parenting behaviors, individual child characteristics, and finally neighborhood and cultural variables. The combination of theoretical and machine-learning models strengthens both approaches and accurately predicts which adolescents demonstrate above average mental health difficulties in approximately 7 of 10 adolescents 3-7 years after the data used in machine learning models were collected., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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39. Pre-pandemic psychological and behavioral predictors of responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in nine countries.
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Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Godwin J, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, and Bornstein MH
- Subjects
- Humans, Mediation Analysis, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Male, Female, Adolescent, Young Adult, COVID-19 epidemiology, Internationality, Internal-External Control, Emotional Adjustment
- Abstract
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, adolescents ( N = 1,330; M
ages = 15 and 16; 50% female), mothers, and fathers from nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, United States) reported on adolescents' internalizing and externalizing problems, adolescents completed a lab-based task to assess tendency for risk-taking, and adolescents reported on their well-being. During the pandemic, participants ( Mage = 20) reported on changes in their internalizing, externalizing, and substance use compared to before the pandemic. Across countries, adolescents' internalizing problems pre-pandemic predicted increased internalizing during the pandemic, and poorer well-being pre-pandemic predicted increased externalizing and substance use during the pandemic. Other relations varied across countries, and some were moderated by confidence in the government's handling of the pandemic, gender, and parents' education.- Published
- 2023
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40. Understanding Heterogeneity in the Impact of Public Preschool Programs.
- Author
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Watts TW, Jenkins JM, Dodge KA, Carr RC, Sauval M, Bai Y, Escueta M, Duer J, Ladd H, Muschkin C, Peisner-Feinberg E, and Ananat E
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Humans, Female, Educational Status, Schools, Ethnicity, Academic Success, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
- Abstract
We examine the North Carolina Pre-K (NC Pre-K) program to test the hypothesis that observed variation in effects resulting from exposure to the program can be attributed to interactions with other environmental factors that occur before, during, or after the pre-k year. We examine student outcomes in 5th grade and test interaction effects between NC's level of investment in public pre-k and moderating factors. Our main sample includes the population of children born in North Carolina between 1987 and 2005 who later attended a public school in that state, had valid achievement data in 5th grade, and could be matched by administrative record review (n = 1,207,576; 58% White non-Hispanic, 29% Black non-Hispanic, 7% Hispanic, 6% multiracial and Other race/ethnicity). Analyses were based on a natural experiment leveraging variation in county-level funding for NC Pre-K across NC counties during each of the years the state scaled up the program. Exposure to NC Pre-K funding was defined as the per-4-year-old-child state allocation of funds to a county in a year. Regression models included child-level and county-level covariates and county and year fixed effects. Estimates indicate that a child's exposure to higher NC Pre-K funding was positively associated with that child's academic achievement 6 years later. We found no effect on special education placement or grade retention. NC Pre-K funding effects on achievement were positive for all subgroups tested, and statistically significant for most. However, they were larger for children exposed to more disadvantaged environments either before or after the pre-k experience, consistent with a compensatory model where pre-k provides a buffer against the adverse effects of prior negative environmental experiences and protection against the effects of future adverse experiences. In addition, the effect of NC Pre-K funding on achievement remained positive across most environments, supporting an additive effects model. In contrast, few findings supported a dynamic complementarity model. Instrumental variables analyses incorporating a child's NC Pre-K enrollment status indicate that program attendance increased average 5th grade achievement by approximately 20% of a standard deviation, and impacts were largest for children who were Hispanic or whose mothers had less than a high school education. Implications for the future of pre-k scale-up and developmental theory are discussed., (© 2023 The Authors. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development © 2023 Society for Research in Child Development.)
- Published
- 2023
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41. Parenting, Adolescent Sensation Seeking, and Subsequent Substance Use: Moderation by Adolescent Temperament.
- Author
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Kapetanovic S, Zietz S, Lansford JE, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Oburu P, Junla D, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, and Al-Hassan SM
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Adolescent, Male, Parenting psychology, Temperament, Sensation, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Substance-Related Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Although previous research has identified links between parenting and adolescent substance use, little is known about the role of adolescent individual processes, such as sensation seeking, and temperamental tendencies for such links. To test tenets from biopsychosocial models of adolescent risk behavior and differential susceptibility theory, this study investigated longitudinal associations among positive and harsh parenting, adolescent sensation seeking, and substance use and tested whether the indirect associations were moderated by adolescent temperament, including activation control, frustration, sadness, and positive emotions. Longitudinal data reported by adolescents (n = 892; 49.66% girls) and their mothers from eight cultural groups when adolescents were ages 12, 13, and 14 were used. A moderated mediation model showed that parenting was related to adolescent substance use, both directly and indirectly, through sensation seeking. Indirect associations were moderated by adolescent temperament. This study advances understanding of the developmental paths between the contextual and individual factors critical for adolescent substance use across a wide range of cultural contexts., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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42. The effects of a universal short-term home visiting program: Two-year impact on parenting behavior and parent mental health.
- Author
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Baziyants GA, Dodge KA, Bai Y, Goodman WB, O'Donnell K, and Murphy RA
- Subjects
- Infant, Child, Female, Humans, Child, Preschool, Mental Health, Mothers, Parents, Parenting psychology, Depression, Postpartum prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: At the time of childbirth, families face heightened levels of unmet need. These needs, if left unmet, can lead parents to engage in less positive parenting practices, which in turn, increase the risk of child maltreatment. Family Connects (FC) is a universal postnatal nurse home-visiting program designed to prevent child maltreatment by supporting all families in a community through one to three visits to improve parent mental health and parenting behaviors. A randomized controlled trial of FC demonstrated improving positive parenting and reducing postpartum depression through age 6 months., Objective: To determine sustained (2-year) impact of random assignment to FC on parenting behavior and parent mental health and identify heterogeneity of effects., Participants and Setting: A representative subsample of 496 families that had been randomized to FC (255 treatment; 241 control) of infants born between July 1, 2009, and December 31, 2010, in Durham County, North Carolina., Methods: Demographic characteristics were collected through hospital discharge data. Treatment-blinded interviewers collected maternal reports of parenting behavior and mental health at infant age two years. Moderation and subgroup analyses were conducted to estimate heterogeneity in impact of FC., Results: Mothers assigned to FC engaged in more self-reported positive parenting relative to control mothers (B = 0.21; p < 0.05). Hispanic mothers assigned to FC reported greater sense of parenting competence (B = 1.28; p < 0.05). No significant main effect differences were identified for negative parenting, maternal depression, or father involvement., Conclusions: Assignment to FC was associated with improvements in population-level self-reported scores of positive parenting 2 years post-intervention., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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43. The Intergenerational Transmission of Maladaptive Parenting and its Impact on Child Mental Health: Examining Cross-Cultural Mediating Pathways and Moderating Protective Factors.
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Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, and Bornstein MH
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Child, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Mental Health, Protective Factors, Intergenerational Relations, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Cross-Cultural Comparison
- Abstract
Using a sample of 1338 families from 12 cultural groups in 9 nations, we examined whether retrospectively remembered Generation 1 (G1) parent rejecting behaviors were passed to Generation 2 (G2 parents), whether such intergenerational transmission led to higher Generation 3 (G3 child) externalizing and internalizing behavior at age 13, and whether such intergenerational transmission could be interrupted by parent participation in parenting programs or family income increases of > 5%. Utilizing structural equation modeling, we found that the intergenerational transmission of parent rejection that is linked with higher child externalizing and internalizing problems occurs across cultural contexts. However, the magnitude of transmission is greater in cultures with higher normative levels of parent rejection. Parenting program participation broke this intergenerational cycle in fathers from cultures high in normative parent rejection. Income increases appear to break this intergenerational cycle in mothers from most cultures, regardless of normative levels of parent rejection. These results tentatively suggest that bolstering protective factors such as parenting program participation, income supplementation, and (in cultures high in normative parent rejection) legislative changes and other population-wide positive parenting information campaigns aimed at changing cultural parenting norms may be effective in breaking intergenerational cycles of maladaptive parenting and improving child mental health across multiple generations., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
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44. Predicting child aggression: The role of parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression across 13 cultural groups in 9 nations.
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Rothenberg WA, Sorbring E, Lansford JE, Peña Alampay L, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Giunta LD, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Tapanya S, Steinberg L, Maria Uribe Tirado L, and Yotanyamaneewong S
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Aggression psychology, Internationality, Culture, Parents education, Parents psychology, Child Behavior psychology, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression both predict the emergence of child aggression, but they are rarely studied together and in longitudinal contexts. The present study does so by examining the unique predictive effects of parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 on child aggression at age 9 in 1456 children from 13 cultural groups in 9 nations. Multiple group structural equation models explored whether age 8 child and parent endorsement of reactive aggression predicted subsequent age 9 child endorsement of reactive aggression and child aggression, after accounting for prior child aggression and parent education. Results revealed that greater parent endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 predicted greater child endorsement of aggression at age 9, that greater parent endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 uniquely predicted greater aggression at age 9 in girls, and that greater child endorsement of reactive aggression at age 8 uniquely predicted greater aggression at age 9 in boys. All three of these associations emerged across cultures. Implications of, and explanations for, study findings are discussed., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
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45. Intergenerational effects of the Fast Track intervention on the home environment: A randomized control trial.
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Rothenberg WA, Lansford JE, Godwin JW, Dodge KA, Copeland WE, Odgers CL, McMahon RJ, and Goulter N
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Adult, Humans, Aggression, Surveys and Questionnaires, Mothers, Parents
- Abstract
Background: Maladaptive family environments harm child development and are passed across generations. Childhood interventions may break this intergenerational cycle by improving the family environments children form as adults. The present study investigates this hypothesis by examining follow-up data collected 18 years after the end of the childhood Fast Track intervention designed to prevent externalizing problems., Methods: We examined whether Fast Track assignment from grades 1 to 10 prevented the emergence of maladaptive family environments at age 34. A total of 400 (n = 206 in intervention condition, n = 194 controls) Fast Track participants who were parents at age 34 were surveyed about 11 aspects of their current family environment. The hypotheses and analytic plan were preregistered at https://osf.io/dz9t5 and the Fast Track trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01653535)., Results: Multiple group linear regression models revealed that mothers who participated in the Fast Track intervention as children had lower depression symptoms, alcohol problems, drug problems, corporal punishment use, and food insecurity compared to control group mothers. All effects were modest in magnitude. However, for these same mothers, the Fast Track intervention had no effect on cannabis problems, experiences of romantic partner violence, or maternal use of physical aggression or warmth with their children. Additionally, mothers in the Fast Track intervention group reported higher levels of family chaos than those in the control group, but this effect may be a byproduct of the higher number of children per household in the intervention group. No intervention effects were found for fathers who participated in the Fast Track intervention as children., Conclusions: Childhood assignment to Fast Track has some beneficial effects for girls, but not boys, on the family environments these individuals formed as adults 18 years later., (© 2022 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2023
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46. Fast Track intervention effects on family formation.
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Lansford JE, Godwin J, Copeland WE, Dodge KA, Odgers CL, Rothenberg WA, and Rybińska A
- Subjects
- Child, Male, Humans, Adult, Female, Parents, Ethnicity, Divorce, Family Characteristics, Marriage
- Abstract
The present study examines whether the Fast Track (FT) intervention, a 10-year randomized controlled trial with children at risk for conduct problems, affects family formation in adulthood, as indexed by partnerships, parenthood, and family structure, and whether the intervention effect differs across participants' gender and race/ethnicity. Participants included 891 children (intervention n = 445; control n = 446; 69% male; 51% Black, 47% White) who were recruited in kindergarten and followed to age 32 or 34 (80% participation of still-living participants), when they reported on their romantic partnerships, parenthood, and family structure. Controlling for numerous covariates that are related to family formation, intervention participants were more likely than those in the control group to be married rather than single and to have a larger number of children; the intervention and control groups did not differ on cohabitation status, age at first marriage, whether they had ever been divorced, their likelihood of being a parent, the age at which they first became a parent, the spacing of births, family structure (partnered or not, with or without children), or in whether they were residentially independent of their parents and grandparents. Intervention effects were not moderated by gender, but race/ethnicity moderated the effect of the intervention on the probability of having any children and the number of children. These findings suggest that several elements of family formation may remain unchanged by an intervention that changes many other behavioral and psychological trajectories of participants. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2023
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47. Typicality and trajectories of problematic and positive behaviors over adolescence in eight countries.
- Author
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Buchanan CM, Zietz S, Lansford JE, Skinner AT, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Uribe Tirado LM, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan S, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, and Deater-Deckard K
- Abstract
In this study, we examine the predictions of a storm and stress characterization of adolescence concerning typicality and trajectories of internalizing, externalizing, and wellbeing from late childhood through late adolescence. Using data from the Parenting Across Cultures study, levels and trajectories of these characteristics were analyzed for 1,211 adolescents from 11 cultural groups across eight countries. Data were longitudinal, collected at seven timepoints from 8 to 17 years of age. Results provide more support for a storm and stress characterization with respect to the developmental trajectories of behavior and characteristics from childhood to adolescence or across the adolescent years than with respect to typicality of behavior. Overall, adolescents' behavior was more positive than negative in all cultural groups across childhood and adolescence. There was cultural variability in both prevalence and trajectories of behavior. The data provide support for arguments that a more positive and nuanced characterization of adolescence is appropriate and important., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Buchanan, Zietz, Lansford, Skinner, Di Giunta, Dodge, Gurdal, Liu, Long, Oburu, Pastorelli, Sorbring, Steinberg, Tapanya, Uribe Tirado, Yotanyamaneewong, Alampay, Al-Hassan, Bacchini, Bornstein, Chang and Deater-Deckard.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The HOME-21: A revised measure of the home environment for the 21st century tested in two independent samples.
- Author
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Lansford JE, Odgers CL, Bradley RH, Godwin J, Copeland WE, Rothenberg WA, and Dodge KA
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Female, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Male, Parenting psychology, Social Support, Home Environment, Parents psychology
- Abstract
For decades, the Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) has been the most widely used measure of children's home environments. This report provides a revised version of the HOME-Short Form, the HOME-21, reflecting historical changes in family composition and caregiver roles, norms about the acceptability of different forms of discipline, and children's digital environments. Using data from two samples of parents of children ages 0-17 (Fast Track [FT], N = 553, age = 33.8, 49.2% female, 48.1% Black, 51.9% White/other; Great Smoky Mountains Study [GSMS], N = 722, age = 37.2, 54.7% female, 67.6% White, 6.6% Black, 25.8% American Indian), we assess the utility of the HOME-21 with descriptive statistics and correlations with a range of demographic, family context, parenting, and child adjustment measures. Higher HOME-21 scores were correlated with obtaining a high school diploma or equivalency diploma (in GSMS only), having 4 or more years of college, and household income. HOME-21 was also correlated with having a more favorable family context indexed by fewer stressful life events (in FT only), less household food insecurity, lower household chaos, and more perceived social support. Higher HOME-21 scores were correlated with better parenting in the form of parental acceptance, positive parenting, warm involvement, appropriate and consistent discipline, verbal discussion, less physical aggression, and greater parental self-efficacy. Higher HOME-21 scores were correlated with better child adjustment in terms of fewer emotional and conduct problems, less hyperactivity, and more prosocial behavior. The HOME-21 has utility for use in future studies of children's home environments in the 21st century. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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49. A Longitudinal Examination of the Family Stress Model of Economic Hardship in Seven Countries.
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Zietz S, Lansford JE, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Sorbring E, Skinner AT, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Bornstein MH, Chang L, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, and Gurdal S
- Abstract
The Family Stress Model of Economic Hardship (FSM) posits that economic situations create differences in psychosocial outcomes for parents and developmental outcomes for their adolescent children. However, prior studies guided by the FSM have been mostly in high-income countries and have included only mother report or have not disaggregated mother and father report. Our focal research questions were whether the indirect effect of economic hardship on adolescent mental health was mediated by economic pressure, parental depression, dysfunctional dyadic coping, and parenting, and whether these relations differed by culture and mother versus father report. We conducted multiple group serial mediation path models using longitudinal data from adolescents ages 12-15 in 2008-2012 from 1,082 families in 10 cultural groups in seven countries (Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States). Taken together, the indirect effect findings suggest partial support for the FSM in most cultural groups across study countries. We found associations among economic hardship, parental depression, parenting, and adolescent internalizing and externalizing. Findings support polices and interventions aimed at disrupting each path in the model to mitigate the effects of economic hardship on parental depression, harsh parenting, and adolescents' externalizing and internalizing problems., Competing Interests: Declarations: The authors have no relevant financial or non-financial interests to disclose.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Positive parenting, adolescent adjustment, and quality of adolescent diet in nine countries.
- Author
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Zietz S, Cheng E, Lansford JE, Deater-Deckard K, Di Giunta L, Dodge KA, Gurdal S, Liu Q, Long Q, Oburu P, Pastorelli C, Skinner AT, Sorbring E, Steinberg L, Tapanya S, Tirado LMU, Yotanyamaneewong S, Alampay LP, Al-Hassan SM, Bacchini D, Chang L, and Bornstein MH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Diet
- Abstract
Introduction: We sought to understand the relation between positive parenting and adolescent diet, whether adolescents' internalizing and externalizing behaviors mediate relations between positive parenting and adolescent diet, and whether the same associations hold for both boys and girls and across cultural groups., Methods: Adolescents (N = 1334) in 12 cultural groups in nine countries were followed longitudinally from age 12 to 15. We estimated two sets of multiple group structural equation models, one by gender and one by cultural group., Results: Modeling by gender, our findings suggest a direct effect of positive parenting at age 12 on a higher quality diet at age 15 for males (β = .140; 95% CI: 0.057, 0.229), but an indirect effect of positive parenting at age 12 on a higher quality diet at age 15 by decreasing externalizing behaviors at age 14 for females (β = .011; 95% CI: 0.002, 0.029). Modeling by cultural group, we found no significant direct effect of positive parenting at age 12 on the quality of adolescent diet at age 15. There was a significant negative effect of positive parenting at age 12 on internalizing (β = -.065; 95% CI: -0.119, -0.009) and externalizing at age 14 (β = -.033; 95% CI: -0.086, -0.018)., Conclusions: We founder gender differences in the relations among positive parenting, adolescents' externalizing and internalizing behaviors, and adolescent diet. Our findings indicate that quality of parenting is important not only in promoting adolescent mental health but potentially also in promoting the quality of adolescents' diet., (© 2022 The Foundation for Professionals in Services for Adolescents.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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