Title of article :
Differential Genetic and Environmental Influences
on Reactive and Proactive Aggression in Children
Author/Authors :
Laura A. Baker، نويسنده , , Adrian Raine، نويسنده , , Jianghong Liu &
Kristen C. Jacobson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
While significant heritability for childhood aggression
has been claimed, it is not known whether there are
differential genetic and environmental contributions to proactive
and reactive forms of aggression in children. This study
quantifies genetic and environmental contributions to these
two forms of aggression in an ethnically diverse urban sample
of 9–10 year old twins (N=1219), and compares results
across different informants (child self-report, mother, and
teacher ratings) using the Reactive–Proactive Aggression
Questionnaire (RPQ). Confirmatory factor analysis of RPQ
items indicated a significant and strong fit for a two-factor
proactive–reactive model which was significantly superior to
a one-factor model and which replicated across gender as
well as the three informant sources. Males scored significantly
higher than females on both self-report reactive and
proactive aggression, findings that replicated on mother and
teacher versions of the RPQ. Asian–Americans scored lower
than most ethnic groups on reactive aggression yet were
equivalent to Caucasians on proactive aggression. African–
Americans scored higher than other ethnic groups on all
measures of aggression except caregiver reports. Heritable
influences were found for both forms of aggression across
informants, but while boys’ self-reports revealed genetic
influences on proactive (50%) and reactive (38%) aggression,
shared and non-shared environmental influences almost
entirely accounted for girls’ self-report reactive and proactive
aggression. Although genetic correlations between reactive
and proactive aggression were significant across informants,
there was evidence that the genetic correlation was less than
unity in boys self reported aggression, indicating that genetic
factors differ for proactive and reactive aggression. These
findings provide the first evidence for varying genetic and
environmental etiologies for reactive and proactive aggression
across gender, and provide additional support for
distinction between these two forms of aggression.
Keywords :
Aggression . Reactive . Proactive . Genetic .Gender
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology