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      Biopsychosocial Regulatory Processes in the Development of Childhood Behavioral Problems 

      Regulatory Competence and Early Disruptive Behavior Problems: The Role of Physiological Regulation

      edited-book
      Cambridge University Press

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          Adolescence-limited and life-course-persistent antisocial behavior: A developmental taxonomy.

          A dual taxonomy is presented to reconcile 2 incongruous facts about antisocial behavior: (a) It shows impressive continuity over age, but (b) its prevalence changes dramatically over age, increasing almost 10-fold temporarily during adolescence. This article suggests that delinquency conceals 2 distinct categories of individuals, each with a unique natural history and etiology: A small group engages in antisocial behavior of 1 sort or another at every life stage, whereas a larger group is antisocial only during adolescence. According to the theory of life-course-persistent antisocial behavior, children's neuropsychological problems interact cumulatively with their criminogenic environments across development, culminating in a pathological personality. According to the theory of adolescence-limited antisocial behavior, a contemporary maturity gap encourages teens to mimic antisocial behavior in ways that are normative and adjustive.
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            Executive Functions and Developmental Psychopathology

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              Developmental trajectories of childhood disruptive behaviors and adolescent delinquency: a six-site, cross-national study.

              This study used data from 6 sites and 3 countries to examine the developmental course of physical aggression in childhood and to analyze its linkage to violent and nonviolent offending outcomes in adolescence. The results indicate that among boys there is continuity in problem behavior from childhood to adolescence and that such continuity is especially acute when early problem behavior takes the form of physical aggression. Chronic physical aggression during the elementary school years specifically increases the risk for continued physical violence as well as other nonviolent forms of delinquency during adolescence. However, this conclusion is reserved primarily for boys, because the results indicate no clear linkage between childhood physical aggression and adolescent offending among female samples despite notable similarities across male and female samples in the developmental course of physical aggression in childhood.
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                Book Chapter
                February 16 2009
                : 86-115
                10.1017/CBO9780511575877.006
                f0269954-3803-44a7-93d0-b55f60c72709
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