Fernandez Castelao Carolin, Kröner-Herwig Birgit
Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Georg-August-University of Göttingen, Goßlerstraße 14, 37073, Göttingen, Germany,
J Youth Adolesc. 2014 May;43(5):775-89. doi: 10.1007/s10964-013-0011-9. Epub 2013 Sep 4.
Recent studies have shown that the development of externalizing behavior in childhood and adolescence can be described through different developmental pathways. However, knowledge about differences between the sexes regarding the trajectories is limited. This study focused on potential differences by examining the trajectories of self-reported externalizing symptoms for girls and boys separately. In addition, the relationships of several familiar and child-specific variables with those developmental courses were assessed. The study was conducted on a large community sample of German youths (N = 3,893; mean age 11.38 years; 50 % girls) over 4 years. Using growth mixture modeling, three different classes of trajectories were found for both sexes. The classes differed with regard to the level and the course of symptoms ("low", "moderate", "high-decreasing"). Girls were overrepresented in the "low" class, whereas boys were predominant in the "moderate" and "high-decreasing" classes. The multiple group analysis revealed that the girls and boys differed significantly in their level and linear course of symptoms with regard to the "high-decreasing" class. In contrast, no sex differences were found in the growth factors of the "low" and "moderate" classes. The regression analyses showed that the children's depressive symptoms, dysfunctional parenting style, and negative family climate were associated significantly with the level and course of symptoms as well as the class membership of girls and boys. Life events predicted class membership only for boys, whereas maternal depressive symptoms and family conflict did not demonstrate any significant relationship. The sizes of the predictive associations with the growth factors were similar for both sexes. The results are discussed with regard to existing developmental models and their possible implications for prevention and future research.
最近的研究表明,儿童和青少年外化行为的发展可以通过不同的发展途径来描述。然而,关于两性在这些轨迹方面差异的知识有限。本研究通过分别考察女孩和男孩自我报告的外化症状轨迹,聚焦于潜在差异。此外,还评估了几个常见的和特定于儿童的变量与这些发展过程的关系。该研究对德国青少年的一个大型社区样本(N = 3893;平均年龄11.38岁;50%为女孩)进行了为期4年的跟踪。使用增长混合模型,发现两性均存在三种不同类型的轨迹。这些类型在症状水平和发展过程方面存在差异(“低”、“中”、“高-下降”)。“低”类型中女孩占比过高,而“中”和“高-下降”类型中男孩占主导。多组分析显示,在“高-下降”类型中,女孩和男孩在症状水平和线性发展过程上存在显著差异。相比之下,“低”和“中”类型的增长因素未发现性别差异。回归分析表明,儿童的抑郁症状、功能失调的养育方式和消极的家庭氛围与女孩和男孩的症状水平、发展过程以及类型归属显著相关。生活事件仅对男孩的类型归属有预测作用,而母亲的抑郁症状和家庭冲突未显示出任何显著关系。两性与增长因素的预测关联大小相似。研究结果结合现有的发展模型进行了讨论,并探讨了其对预防和未来研究的可能影响。