Author:
MOFFITT TERRIE E.,CASPI AVSHALOM
Abstract
This article reports a comparison on childhood risk factors of males and females exhibiting
childhood-onset and adolescent-onset antisocial behavior, using data from the Dunedin
longitudinal study. Childhood-onset delinquents had childhoods of inadequate parenting,
neurocognitive problems, and temperament and behavior problems, whereas adolescent-onset
delinquents did not have these pathological backgrounds. Sex comparisons showed a
male-to-female ratio of 10:1 for childhood-onset delinquency but a sex ratio of only 1.5:1 for
adolescence-onset delinquency. Showing the same pattern as males, childhood-onset females had
high-risk backgrounds but adolescent-onset females did not. These findings are consistent with
core predictions from the taxonomic theory of life-course persistent and adolescence-limited
antisocial behavior.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
1197 articles.
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