Suppr超能文献

环境因素对反社会行为随时间的稳定性的贡献:它们是共享的还是非共享的?

Environmental contributions to the stability of antisocial behavior over time: are they shared or non-shared?

机构信息

Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.

出版信息

J Abnorm Child Psychol. 2010 Apr;38(3):327-37. doi: 10.1007/s10802-009-9367-4.

Abstract

It has recently been argued that shared environmental influences are moderate, identifiable, and persistent sources of individual differences in most forms of child and adolescent psychopathology, including antisocial behavior. Unfortunately, prior studies examining the stability of shared environmental influences over time were limited by possible passive gene-environment correlations, shared informants effects, and/or common experiences of trauma. The current study sought to address each of these limitations. We examined adolescent self-reported antisocial behavior in a 3.5 year longitudinal sample of 610 biological and adoptive sibling pairs from the Sibling Interaction and Behavior Study (SIBS). Results revealed that 74-81% of shared environmental influences present at time 1 were also present at time 2, whereas most non-shared environmental influences (88-89%) were specific to a particular assessment period. Such results provide an important constructive replication of prior research, strongly suggesting that shared environmental contributions to antisocial behavior are systematic in nature.

摘要

最近有人认为,在大多数形式的儿童和青少年精神病理学中,包括反社会行为,共同的环境影响是适度的、可识别的和持续存在的个体差异的来源。不幸的是,先前研究共同环境影响随时间的稳定性的研究受到可能的被动基因-环境相关性、共同信息源效应和/或共同创伤经历的限制。本研究旨在解决这些限制。我们在兄弟姐妹互动和行为研究(SIBS)中对 610 对生物和收养兄弟姐妹进行了为期 3.5 年的纵向样本,调查了青少年自我报告的反社会行为。结果表明,在第一时间存在的 74-81%的共同环境影响在第二时间也存在,而大多数非共同环境影响(88-89%)仅在特定评估期间存在。这些结果提供了对先前研究的重要建设性复制,强烈表明反社会行为的共同环境贡献本质上是系统性的。

相似文献

引用本文的文献

本文引用的文献

6
The mental health of US adolescents adopted in infancy.美国婴儿期被收养青少年的心理健康。
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2008 May;162(5):419-25. doi: 10.1001/archpedi.162.5.419.

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验