Literature DB >> 9549245

Developmental psychopathology, personality, and temperament: reflections on recent behavioral genetics research.

J T Nigg1, H H Goldsmith.   

Abstract

Personality, temperament, and psychopathology were until recently largely distinct areas of study, each of which emphasized partitioning of heritable and environmental variance. The emergence of the paradigm of developmental psychopathology along with application of multivariate biometric models to behavioral genetic data has defined a second phase of research in these domains. Integrated research has begun to map dimensional liability-threshold models of psychopathology and to evaluate empirically the categorical versus dimensional etiology of traits and disorders. An interesting pattern in the data is that psychopathology is probably not merely an extreme of temperament or personality in many cases. Variations in temperament and personality are now known to be heavily influenced by additive genetic and nonshared environmental factors and to exhibit stable or increasing heritability across development. This pattern holds for some measures of psychopathology but not for others. For example, shared environment effects and decreasing heritability influence much adolescent psychopathology, and comorbid problems in young children appear to be due in part to shared environment effects. Other recent biometric work on the central problem of comorbidity in psychopathology suggests that shared genetic covariation accounts for some specific comorbidities but not others. A third phase of research is now underway, featuring study of specific molecular gene mechanisms by means of linkage and association studies in relation to behavioral phenotypes. Complementary integration of discoveries from biometric behavioral studies and molecular studies is expected to be the norm for the near future.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9549245

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Biol        ISSN: 0018-7143            Impact factor:   0.553


  7 in total

1.  Associations between temperament and DSM-IV externalizing disorders in children and adolescents.

Authors:  David C Rettew; William Copeland; Catherine Stanger; James J Hudziak
Journal:  J Dev Behav Pediatr       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 2.225

Review 2.  Temperament and its role in developmental psychopathology.

Authors:  David C Rettew; Laura McKee
Journal:  Harv Rev Psychiatry       Date:  2005 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.732

3.  Inattention/hyperactivity and aggression from early childhood to adolescence: heterogeneity of trajectories and differential influence of family environment characteristics.

Authors:  Jennifer M Jester; Joel T Nigg; Kenneth Adams; Hiram E Fitzgerald; Leon I Puttler; Maria M Wong; Robert A Zucker
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2005

4.  Interactions between child and parent temperament and child behavior problems.

Authors:  David C Rettew; Catherine Stanger; Laura McKee; Alicia Doyle; James J Hudziak
Journal:  Compr Psychiatry       Date:  2006-04-21       Impact factor: 3.735

5.  Exploring the boundary between temperament and generalized anxiety disorder: a receiver operating characteristic analysis.

Authors:  David C Rettew; Alicia C Doyle; Monica Kwan; Catherine Stanger; James J Hudziak
Journal:  J Anxiety Disord       Date:  2006-04-17

6.  The genetic architecture of neuroticism in 3301 Dutch adolescent twins as a function of age and sex: a study from the Dutch twin register.

Authors:  David C Rettew; Jacqueline M Vink; Gonneke Willemsen; Alicia Doyle; James J Hudziak; Dorret I Boomsma
Journal:  Twin Res Hum Genet       Date:  2006-02       Impact factor: 1.587

7.  Proprioceptive Indicators of Personality and Individual Differences in Behavior in Children With ADHD.

Authors:  Liudmila Liutsko; Tania Iglesias; Josep Maria Tous Ral; Alexander Veraksa
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-11-27
  7 in total

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