Title of article
Age-of-Onset or Behavioral Sub-Types? A Prospective Comparison of Two Approaches to Characterizing the Heterogeneity within Antisocial Behavior
Author/Authors
S. Alexandra Burt، نويسنده , , M. Brent Donnellan & William G. Iacono، نويسنده , , Matt McGue، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
12
From page
633
To page
644
Abstract
There are two common approaches to sub-typing
the well-documented heterogeneity within antisocial behavior:
age-of-onset (i.e., childhood-onset versus adolescence-onset;
see Moffitt 1993) and behavioral (i.e., physical aggression
versus non-aggressive rule-breaking). These approaches
appear to be associated, such that aggression is more
characteristic of childhood-onset antisocial behavior whereas
rule-breaking is linked to both child- and adolescence-onset
antisocial behavior. However, it remains unclear which
approach, if either, better explains the heterogeneity within
antisocial behavior. We examined this question in a prospective
sample of male twins, assessed at the ages of 11, 14, 17,
and 24 years. Although the age-of-onset subtypes predicted
adult antisocial behavior in the expected direction when
analyzed alone, this association dissipated once we controlled
for aggression and rule-breaking. Such findings suggest that
the behavioral sub-types of antisocial behavior may be a
stronger predictor of later antisocial outcomes than is its
age-of-onset.
Keywords
Antisocial behavior . Age-of-onset .Aggression . Rule-breaking
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
829230
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