Title of article
The Role of Harsh Discipline in Explaining Sex Differences in Conduct Disorder: a Study of Opposite-Sex Twin Pairs
Author/Authors
Madeline H. Meier &Wendy S. Slutske & Andrew C. Heath، نويسنده , , Nicholas G. Martin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
12
From page
653
To page
664
Abstract
In the current study, two hypotheses about the
role of harsh discipline (HD) in explaining the sex
difference in the prevalence of conduct disorder (CD) were
evaluated: that boys exhibit more CD than girls because (1)
they are exposed to more HD and/or (2) there is a greater
association between HD and CD in boys. These hypotheses
were evaluated in a sample of male and female adult twins
from different families (N=3,502) as well as a sample of
adult twin brothers and sisters (N=655) in order to examine
the extent to which sex differences remained after controlling
for between-family differences. Retrospective reports
of HD experienced between ages 6–13 and DSM-IV CD
symptoms experienced before age 18 were obtained via
structured psychiatric telephone interviews. Boys reported
higher mean levels of HD and CD than girls, both between
and within families, and the results of model-fitting
analyses suggested that differences in the use of harsh
disciplinary practices for sons versus daughters may
partially explain the sex difference in the prevalence of
CD. Between families, the relation between HD and CD
was greater for girls than boys, but within families, there
was no evidence of a sex difference in the relation between
HD and CD. Inconsistent between-family and within-family
results suggest that factors that differ between families are
confounded with sex differences in the relation between
HD and CD. A more stringent test of sex differences
involves eliminating these between-family differences by
studying boys and girls within the same family.
Keywords
Conduct disorder . Harsh discipline .Sex differences
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
829049
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