Genetic origin of the relationship between parental negativity and behavior problems from early childhood to adolescence: A longitudinal genetically sensitive study.

Publication date

2014-07-21T07:43:19Z

2014-07-21T07:43:19Z

2013-04-30

2014-07-21T07:43:19Z

Abstract

Little is known about how genetic and environmental factors contribute to the association between parental negativity and behavior problems from early childhood to adolescence. The current study fitted a cross-lagged model in a sample consisting of 4,075 twin pairs to explore (a) the role of genetic and environmental factors in the relationship between parental negativity and behavior problems from age 4 to age 12, (b) whether parent-driven and child-driven processes independently explain the association, and (c) whether there are sex differences in this relationship. Both phenotypes showed substantial genetic influence at both ages. The concurrent overlap between them was mainly accounted for by genetic factors. Causal pathways representing stability of the phenotypes and parent-driven and child-driven effects significantly and independently account for the association. Significant but slight differences were found between males and females for parent-driven effects. These results were highly similar when general cognitive ability was added as a covariate. In summary, the longitudinal association between parental negativity and behavior problems seems to be bidirectional and mainly accounted for by genetic factors. Furthermore, child-driven effects were mainly genetically mediated, and parent-driven effects were a function of both genetic and shared-environmental factors.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954579412001198

Development and Psychopathology, 2013, vol. 25, num. 2, p. 487-500

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954579412001198

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(c) Cambridge University Press, 2013

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