» Articles » PMID: 27696324

Neighborhood Deprivation During Early Childhood and Conduct Problems in Middle Childhood: Mediation by Aggressive Response Generation

Overview
Publisher Springer
Date 2016 Oct 4
PMID 27696324
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The tremendous negative impact of conduct problems to the individual and society has provided the impetus for identifying risk factors, particularly in early childhood. Exposure to neighborhood deprivation in early childhood is a robust predictor of conduct problems in middle childhood. Efforts to identify and test mediating mechanisms by which neighborhood deprivation confers increased risk for behavioral problems have predominantly focused on peer relationships and community-level social processes. Less attention has been dedicated to potential cognitive mediators of this relationship, such as aggressive response generation, which refers to the tendency to generate aggressive solutions to ambiguous social stimuli with negative outcomes. In this study, we examined aggressive response generation, a salient component of social information processing, as a mediating process linking neighborhood deprivation to later conduct problems at age 10.5. Participants (N = 731; 50.5 % male) were drawn from a multisite randomized prevention trial that includes an ethnically diverse and low-income sample of male and female children and their primary caregivers followed prospectively from toddlerhood to middle childhood. Results indicated that aggressive response generation partially mediated the relationship between neighborhood deprivation and parent- and teacher-report of conduct problems, but not youth-report. Results suggest that the detrimental effects of neighborhood deprivation on youth adjustment may occur by altering the manner in which children process social information.

Citing Articles

Experiences of Adversity and Validity of Baseline Concussion Testing.

DAlessio A, Salas Atwell M, Koroukian S, Bailey C, Briggs F J Athl Train. 2023; 59(4):373-380.

PMID: 36827602 PMC: 11064113. DOI: 10.4085/1062-6050-0502.22.


Children's social information processing predicts both their own and peers' conversational remarks.

Hubbard J, Bookhout M, Zajac L, Moore C, Dozier M Dev Psychol. 2022; 59(6):1153-1165.

PMID: 36548042 PMC: 10198869. DOI: 10.1037/dev0001510.


Associations Between Boys' Early Childhood Exposure to Family and Neighborhood Poverty and Body Mass Index in Early Adolescence.

Hails K, Shaw D J Pediatr Psychol. 2019; 44(9):1009-1018.

PMID: 31233133 PMC: 6761930. DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsz047.


Intimate partner violence exposure predicts antisocial behavior via pro-violence attitudes among males with elevated levels of cortisol.

Peckins M, Shaw D, Waller R, Hyde L Soc Dev. 2018; 27(4):761-776.

PMID: 30573942 PMC: 6296816. DOI: 10.1111/sode.12313.


Preventing at-risk children from developing antisocial and criminal behaviour: a longitudinal study examining the role of parenting, community and societal factors in middle childhood.

Stevens M BMC Psychol. 2018; 6(1):40.

PMID: 30097044 PMC: 6086042. DOI: 10.1186/s40359-018-0254-z.

References
1.
Campbell S, Shaw D, Gilliom M . Early externalizing behavior problems: toddlers and preschoolers at risk for later maladjustment. Dev Psychopathol. 2000; 12(3):467-88. DOI: 10.1017/s0954579400003114. View

2.
Runions K, Keating D . Young children's social information processing: family antecedents and behavioral correlates. Dev Psychol. 2007; 43(4):838-49. DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.43.4.838. View

3.
Supplee L, Unikel E, Shaw D . Physical Environmental Adversity and the Protective Role of Maternal Monitoring in Relation to Early Child Conduct Problems. J Appl Dev Psychol. 2008; 28(2):166-183. PMC: 2039718. DOI: 10.1016/j.appdev.2006.12.001. View

4.
Ingoldsby E, Shaw D, Winslow E, Schonberg M, Gilliom M, Criss M . Neighborhood disadvantage, parent-child conflict, neighborhood peer relationships, and early antisocial behavior problem trajectories. J Abnorm Child Psychol. 2006; 34(3):303-19. DOI: 10.1007/s10802-006-9026-y. View

5.
Lahey B, Pelham W, Loney J, Kipp H, Ehrhardt A, Lee S . Three-year predictive validity of DSM-IV attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children diagnosed at 4-6 years of age. Am J Psychiatry. 2004; 161(11):2014-20. DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.161.11.2014. View