Literature DB >> 29528670

Dimensions of deprivation and threat, psychopathology, and potential mediators: A multi-year longitudinal analysis.

Adam Bryant Miller1, Margaret A Sheridan1, Jamie L Hanson2, Katie A McLaughlin3, John E Bates4, Jennifer E Lansford5, Gregory S Pettit6, Kenneth A Dodge5.   

Abstract

Prior research demonstrates a link between exposure to childhood adversity and psychopathology later in development. However, work on mechanisms linking adversity to psychopathology fails to account for specificity in these pathways across different types of adversity. Here, we test a conceptual model that distinguishes deprivation and threat as distinct forms of childhood adversity with different pathways to psychopathology. Deprivation involves an absence of inputs from the environment, such as cognitive and social stimulation, that influence psychopathology by altering cognitive development, such as verbal abilities. Threat includes experiences involving harm or threat of harm that increase risk for psychopathology through disruptions in social-emotional processing. We test the prediction that deprivation, but not threat, increases risk for psychopathology through altered verbal abilities. Data were drawn from the Child Development Project (N = 585), which followed children for over a decade. We analyze data from assessment points at age 5, 6, 14, and 17 years. Mothers completed interviews at age 5 and 6 on exposure to threat and deprivation experiences. Youth verbal abilities were assessed at age 14. At age 17, mothers reported on child psychopathology. A path analysis model tested longitudinal paths to internalizing and externalizing problems from experiences of deprivation and threat. Consistent with predictions, deprivation was associated with risk for externalizing problems via effects on verbal abilities at age 14. Threat was associated longitudinally with both internalizing and externalizing problems, but these effects were not mediated by verbal abilities. Results suggest that unique developmental mechanisms link different forms of adversity with psychopathology. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29528670      PMCID: PMC5851283          DOI: 10.1037/abn0000331

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol        ISSN: 0021-843X


  58 in total

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  39 in total

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5.  Negative life experiences contribute to racial differences in the neural response to threat.

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Review 9.  Early life stress and brain function: Activity and connectivity associated with processing emotion and reward.

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10.  Network structure reveals clusters of associations between childhood adversities and development outcomes.

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