Developmental trajectories of disruptive behavior problems among sons of alcoholics: Effects of parent psychopathology, family conflict, and child undercontrol. |
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Authors: | Loukas, Alexandra Zucker, Robert A. Fitzgerald, Hiram E. Krull, Jennifer L. |
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Abstract: | This study examined trajectories of disruptive behavior problems from preschool to early adolescence in 302 boys from a community-recruited sample of high-risk families. Growth modeling showed that paternal alcoholism was associated with elevated levels of sons' disruptive behavior problems. Family conflict predicted more disruptive behaviors at school entry and a slower rate of decline in such problems. Parent antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) exacerbated the effects of high preschool levels of sons' undercontrol on level of disruptive behaviors at school entry; this effect became progressively stronger across time. Low levels of undercontrol protected sons of ASPD parents from experiencing heightened levels of disruptive behaviors both at school entry and increasingly as sons grew older. Implications for subsequent maladjustment are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | disruptive behavior problems conflict parental antisocial personality disorder developmental trajectories paternal alcoholism sons child undercontrol high risk families |
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