Title of article
Temperament and Parenting during the First Year of Life Predict Future Child Conduct Problems
Author/Authors
Benjamin B. Lahey، نويسنده , , Carol A. Van Hulle & Kate Keenan، نويسنده , , Paul J. Rathouz، نويسنده , , Brian M. D’Onofrio & Joseph Lee Rodgers، نويسنده , , Irwin D. Waldman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
20
From page
1139
To page
1158
Abstract
Predictive associations between parenting and
temperament during the first year of life and child conduct
problems were assessed longitudinally in 1,863 offspring of a
representative sample of women. Maternal ratings of infant
fussiness, activity level, predictability, and positive affect each
independently predicted maternal ratings of conduct problems
during ages 4–13 years. Furthermore, a significant interaction
indicated that infants who were both low in fussiness and high
in predictability were at very low risk for future conduct
problems. Fussiness was a stronger predictor of conduct
problems in boys whereas fearfulness was a stronger predictor
in girls. Conduct problems also were robustly predicted by
low levels of early mother-report cognitive stimulation when
infant temperament was controlled. Interviewer-rated maternal
responsiveness was a robust predictor of conduct problems,
but only among infants low in fearfulness. Spanking
during infancy predicted slightly more severe conduct
problems, but the prediction was moderated by infant
fussiness and positive affect. Thus, individual differences in
risk for mother-rated conduct problems across childhood are
already partly evident in maternal ratings of temperament
during the first year of life and are predicted by early parenting
and parenting-by-temperament interactions.
Keywords
Infant temperament . Early parenting .Conduct problems
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
828991
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