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Journal Article

Citation

Barker ED, Séguin JR, White HR, Bates ME, Lacourse E, Carbonneau R, Tremblay RE. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 2007; 64(5): 592-599.

Affiliation

Research Unit on Children's Psychosocial Maladjustment, Universite de Montreal, Montreal, Quebec.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, American Medical Association)

DOI

10.1001/archpsyc.64.5.592

PMID

17485611

PMCID

PMC3283575

Abstract

CONTEXT: Neurocognitive mechanisms have long been hypothesized to influence developmental trajectories of antisocial behavior. However, studies examining this association tend to aggregate a variety of problem behaviors that may be differently affected by neurocognitive deficits. OBJECTIVE: To describe the developmental trajectories of physical violence and theft from adolescence to adulthood, their associations, and the neurocognitive characteristics of individuals following different patterns of trajectory association. DESIGN: Accelerated cohort-sequential, longitudinal design. SETTING: Rutgers Health and Human Development Project. PARTICIPANTS: Six hundred ninety-eight men. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Self-reports of physical violence (ages 12-24 years) and theft (ages 12-31 years) were collected across 5 waves. Neurocognitive performance was assessed with executive function and verbal IQ tests between late adolescence and early adulthood. RESULTS: The majority (55%) of subjects showed an increased frequency of theft during the study period, while only a minority (13%) evinced an increasing frequency of physical violence. Executive function and verbal IQ performance were negatively related to high frequency of physical violence but positively related to high frequency of theft. CONCLUSIONS: Developmental trajectories of physical violence and theft during adolescence and early adulthood are different and differently related to neurocognitive functioning. Global indexes of antisocial behavior mask the development of antisocial behavior subtypes and putative causal mechanisms.


Language: en

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