Female and male antisocial trajectories: From childhood origins to adult outcomes
University of California, Irvine · Duke University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
This article reports on the childhood origins and adult outcomes of female versus male antisocial behavior trajectories in the Dunedin longitudinal study. Four antisocial behavior trajectory groups were identified among females and males using general growth mixture modeling and included life-course persistent (LCP), adolescent-onset, childhood-limited, and low trajectory groups. During childhood, both LCP females and males were characterized by social, familial and neurodevelopmental risk factors, whereas those on the adolescent-onset pathway were not. At age 32, women and men on the LCP pathway were engaging in serious violence and experiencing significant mental health, physical health, and economic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 140.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 139
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Developmental psychology
- Young adult
- Longitudinal study
- Injury prevention
- Life course approach
- Suicide prevention
- Mental health
- Gender equality