Literature DB >> 24337690

Does mother know best? Adolescent and mother reports of impulsivity and subsequent delinquency.

Jordan Bechtold1, Caitlin Cavanagh, Elizabeth P Shulman, Elizabeth Cauffman.   

Abstract

Although impulsivity is one of the strongest psychological predictors of crime, it is unclear how well impulsivity, measured at a specific moment in adolescence, predicts criminal behavior months or years into the future. The present study investigated how far into the future self-reports and parents' reports of a youth's impulsivity predicted whether he engaged in illegal behavior, whether one reporter's assessment was more predictive than the other's, and whether there is value in obtaining multiple reports. Data were obtained from a 6-year longitudinal study of adjudicated juvenile offenders (n = 701 mother-son dyads). Youth (m = 15.93 years old; sd = 1.14) and their mothers independently reported on adolescents' impulsivity at the initial assessment. We examined the prospective correlation of these measures with illegal behavior, assessed by official records of arrests and youths' self-reports of offending across the 72-month study period. Youths' and mothers' reports of the adolescents' impulsivity were weakly, but significantly, correlated with one another. Furthermore, mothers' ratings of their sons' impulsivity predicted arrest up to 6 years into the future, whereas youths' reports did not significantly predict arrest beyond 30 months. With respect to youths' self-reports of offending, mothers' ratings of impulsivity again predicted farther into the future (as late as 6 years later) than did youths' self-reports of impulsivity, which were not predictive beyond 4 years. However, across the first 4 years, youths' self-reports of impulsivity explained more variance in self-reported offending than did mothers' ratings. The results underscore the endurance of the predictive utility of an assessment of impulsivity and the importance (and accuracy) of parents' reports of developmental constructs, even when their children are adolescents.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24337690     DOI: 10.1007/s10964-013-0080-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Youth Adolesc        ISSN: 0047-2891


  36 in total

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  7 in total

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Authors:  Michelle A Kuhn; Joshua J Ahles; Jaclyn T Aldrich; Madeline D Wielgus; Amy H Mezulis
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3.  The different faces of impulsivity as links between childhood maltreatment and young adult crime.

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Authors:  Frank D Mann; Sara L Paul; Jennifer L Tackett; Elliot M Tucker-Drob; K Paige Harden
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2017-05-30

5.  Impulse Control and Callous-Unemotional Traits Distinguish Patterns of Delinquency and Substance Use in Justice Involved Adolescents: Examining the Moderating Role of Neighborhood Context.

Authors:  James V Ray; Laura C Thornton; Paul J Frick; Laurence Steinberg; Elizabeth Cauffman
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6.  Analyzing Statistical Mediation with Multiple Informants: A New Approach with an Application in Clinical Psychology.

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7.  A Within-Individual Examination of the Predictors of Gun Carrying During Adolescence and Young Adulthood Among Young Men.

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  7 in total

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