Published January 1, 2015
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Intergenerational Continuity in Parents' and Adolescents' Externalizing Problems: The Role of Life Events and Their Interaction With GABRA2
Creators
- 1. Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Psychiat, Richmond, VA 23298 USA
- 2. Duke Univ, Ctr Child & Family Policy, Durham, NC 27706 USA
- 3. Auburn Univ, Dept Human Dev & Family Studies, Auburn, AL 36849 USA
- 4. Indiana Univ, Dept Psychol & Brain Sci, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
- 5. Univ Jyvaskyla, Dept Psychol, SF-40351 Jyvaskyla, Finland
Description
We examine whether parental externalizing behavior has an indirect effect on adolescent externalizing behavior via elevations in life events, and whether this indirect effect is further qualified by an interaction between life events and adolescents' GABRA2 genotype (rs279871). We use data from 2 samples: the Child Development Project (CDP; n = 324) and FinnTwin12 (n = 802). In CDP, repeated measures of life events, mother-reported adolescent externalizing, and teacher-reported adolescent externalizing were used. In FinnTwin12, life events and externalizing were assessed at age 14. Parental externalizing was indexed by measures of antisocial behavior and alcohol problems or alcohol dependence symptoms in both samples. In CDP, parental externalizing was associated with more life events, and the association between life events and subsequent adolescent externalizing varied as a function of GABRA2 genotype (p <= .05). The association between life events and subsequent adolescent externalizing was stronger for adolescents with 0 copies of the G minor allele compared to those with 1 or 2 copies of the minor allele. Parallel moderation trends were observed in FinnTwin12 (p <= .11). The discussion focuses on how the strength of intergenerational pathways for externalizing psychopathology may differ as a function of adolescent-level individual differences.
Files
bib-5e622f37-a802-4a0b-9085-ce6ff432c180.txt
Files
(339 Bytes)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:f44bb19fef4ff80499c112cd50680e8f
|
339 Bytes | Preview Download |