Literature DB >> 22781856

Pathways and processes of risk in associations among maternal antisocial personality symptoms, interparental aggression, and preschooler's psychopathology.

Patrick T Davies1, Melissa L Sturge-Apple, Dante Cicchetti, Liviah G Manning, Sara E Vonhold.   

Abstract

Two studies examined the nature and processes underlying the joint role of interparental aggression and maternal antisocial personality as predictors of children's disruptive behavior problems. Participants for both studies included a high-risk sample of 201 mothers and their 2-year-old children in a longitudinal, multimethod design. Addressing the form of the interplay between interparental aggression and maternal antisocial personality as risk factors for concurrent and prospective levels of child disruptive problems, the Study 1 findings indicated that maternal antisocial personality was a predictor of the initial levels of preschooler's disruptive problems independent of the effects of interparental violence, comorbid forms of maternal psychopathology, and socioeconomic factors. In attesting to the salience of interparental aggression in the lives of young children, latent difference score analyses further revealed that interparental aggression mediated the link between maternal antisocial personality and subsequent changes in child disruptive problems over a 1-year period. To identify the family mechanisms that account for the two forms of intergenerational transmission of disruptive problems identified in Study 1, Study 2 explored the role of children's difficult temperament, emotional reactivity to interparental conflict, adrenocortical reactivity in a challenging parent-child task, and experiences with maternal parenting as mediating processes. Analyses identified child emotional reactivity to conflict and maternal unresponsiveness as mediators in pathways between interparental aggression and preschooler's disruptive problems. The findings further supported the role of blunted adrenocortical reactivity as an allostatic mediator of the associations between parental unresponsiveness and child disruptive problems.

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Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22781856     DOI: 10.1017/S0954579412000387

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychopathol        ISSN: 0954-5794


  15 in total

1.  Delineating the sequelae of destructive and constructive interparental conflict for children within an evolutionary framework.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Meredith J Martin; Dante Cicchetti
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2011-10-17

2.  The impact of maternal personality traits on behavioral problems in preschool-aged children: a population-based panel study in South Korea.

Authors:  Hyunseuk Kim; Jungwon Choi; Yunhye Oh
Journal:  Arch Womens Ment Health       Date:  2020-09-29       Impact factor: 3.633

3.  Parents' Personality-Disorder Symptoms Predict Children's Symptoms of Anxiety and Depressive Disorders - a Prospective Cohort Study.

Authors:  Silje Steinsbekk; Turid Suzanne Berg-Nielsen; Jay Belsky; Elisabeth Berg Helland; Marte Hågenrud; Andrea Raballo; Lars Wichstrøm
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2019-12

4.  Children's autonomic functioning moderates links between maternal rejecting attitudes and preschool aggressive behaviors.

Authors:  Nicholas J Wagner; Paul D Hastings; Kenneth H Rubin
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2018-06-21       Impact factor: 3.038

5.  The multiple faces of interparental conflict: Implications for cascades of children's insecurity and externalizing problems.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Rochelle F Hentges; Jesse L Coe; Meredith J Martin; Melissa L Sturge-Apple; E Mark Cummings
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2016-05-12

6.  Toward greater specificity in identifying associations among interparental aggression, child emotional reactivity to conflict, and child problems.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Dante Cicchetti; Meredith J Martin
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2012-06-20

7.  The genetic precursors and the advantageous and disadvantageous sequelae of inhibited temperament: an evolutionary perspective.

Authors:  Patrick T Davies; Dante Cicchetti; Rochelle F Hentges; Melissa L Sturge-Apple
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2013-03-25

8.  Poverty, household chaos, and interparental aggression predict children's ability to recognize and modulate negative emotions.

Authors:  C Cybele Raver; Clancy Blair; Patricia Garrett-Peters
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2014-09-12

9.  The Multivariate Roles of Family Instability and Interparental Conflict in Predicting Children's Representations of Insecurity in the Family System and Early School Adjustment Problems.

Authors:  Jesse L Coe; Patrick T Davies; Melissa L Sturge-Apple
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2017-02

10.  Comorbidities and continuities as ontogenic processes: toward a developmental spectrum model of externalizing psychopathology.

Authors:  Theodore P Beauchaine; Tiffany McNulty
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2013-11
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