Literature DB >> 8656312

Delay of gratification, psychopathology, and personality: is low self-control specific to externalizing problems?

R F Krueger1, A Caspi, T E Moffitt, J White, M Stouthamer-Loeber.   

Abstract

We assessed the delay of gratification behavior of 428 twelve- and thirteen-year-old boys, half of whom were known to manifest symptoms of behavioral disturbance. Consistent with the hypothesis that low self-control is a risk factor specific to externalizing (aggressive and delinquent) disorders, boys who showed signs of externalizing disorders tended to seek immediate gratification in a laboratory task more often than both nondisordered boys and boys who showed signs of internalizing (anxious and depressed) disorders. In addition, children who were able to delay immediate gratification were described by their mothers as ego controlled, ego resilient, conscientious, open to experience, and agreeable. These results suggest that poor delay of gratification may be one of a select number of specific risk factors for externalizing disorder, and that good delay of gratification is linked to multiple adaptive tendencies in early adolescence.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8656312     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6494.1996.tb00816.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers        ISSN: 0022-3506


  37 in total

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3.  Heritability of delay discounting in adolescence: a longitudinal twin study.

Authors:  Andrey P Anokhin; Simon Golosheykin; Julia D Grant; Andrew C Heath
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4.  Neuropsychological Predictors of ODD Symptom Dimensions in Young Children.

Authors:  Shayl F Griffith; David H Arnold; Benjamin Rolon-Arroyo; Elizabeth A Harvey
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5.  The relations of problem behavior status to children's negative emotionality, effortful control, and impulsivity: concurrent relations and prediction of change.

Authors:  Nancy Eisenberg; Adrienne Sadovsky; Tracy L Spinrad; Richard A Fabes; Sandra H Losoya; Carlos Valiente; Mark Reiser; Amanda Cumberland; Stephanie A Shepard
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2005-01

6.  Variable- and Person-Centered Approaches to Examining Temperament Vulnerability and Resilience to the Effects of Contextual Risk.

Authors:  Lyndsey Moran; Liliana J Lengua; Maureen Zalewski; Erika Ruberry; Melanie Klien; Stephanie Thompson; Cara Kiff
Journal:  J Res Pers       Date:  2016-03-31

7.  Adolescent self-regulation as resilience: resistance to antisocial behavior within the deviant peer context.

Authors:  Theodore W Gardner; Thomas J Dishion; Arin M Connell
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2007-09-25

8.  Linking family economic pressure and supportive parenting to adolescent health behaviors: two developmental pathways leading to health promoting and health risk behaviors.

Authors:  Josephine A Kwon; K A S Wickrama
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2013-11-20

9.  An Imbalance of Approach and Effortful Control Predicts Externalizing Problems: Support for Extending the Dual-Systems Model into Early Childhood.

Authors:  Katherine Jonas; Grazyna Kochanska
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2018-11

10.  Delinquency as a mediator of the relation between negative affectivity and adolescent alcohol use disorder.

Authors:  Gavin D Shoal; Lauren C Gudonis; Peter R Giancola; Ralph E Tarter
Journal:  Addict Behav       Date:  2007-04-14       Impact factor: 3.913

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