Genetic and Environmental Risks and Developmental Mechanisms Underlying Aggression and Criminal Justice Involvement

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Description
Aggressive and violent behavior is expressed differently across development, but for some adolescents, this behavior leads to criminal justice involvement through arrests and incarceration. Further, according to the biopsychosocial model, aggressive behavior is influenced by both genetics and the environment.

Aggressive and violent behavior is expressed differently across development, but for some adolescents, this behavior leads to criminal justice involvement through arrests and incarceration. Further, according to the biopsychosocial model, aggressive behavior is influenced by both genetics and the environment. This study sought to examine the differential impacts of early childhood environmental cumulative risk and genetic risk on the developmental cascade from middle childhood behavioral aggression and lack of control to adolescent antisocial behavior or callous-unemotional traits, to emerging adult involvement with the criminal justice system, and whether the effects of risk were mitigated by receiving the Family Check-Up (FCU) prevention program in childhood. The sample included high-risk youth (N = 731; 50% female, 50% White, 28% Black, 13% Hispanic, 9% Indigenous, Native Hawaiian, or Asian; of these 13% were multiracial; Mincome = $28,993; representative 515 genotyped) involved in a randomized-controlled trial of the Family Check-Up and followed longitudinally across 11 waves from ages 2 through 19 years. Behavioral measures included parent-report of behavioral aggression and observational lack of control in middle childhood, self-report of antisocial behavior and callous-unemotional (CU) traits in adolescence, and self-report of involvement with the legal system at age 19. Results of longitudinal structural equation modeling (SEM) supported a developmental cascade from middle childhood behavioral aggression to antisocial behavior in adolescence to legal system involvement. Early cumulative environmental risk and polygenic risk tolerance (RT PGS) significantly predicted involvement with the legal system at age 19, while RT PGS also predicted antisocial behavior in adolescence. Further, intervention effects were found for the FCU, such that the FCU disrupted the effects of RT PGS and middle childhood aggression on antisocial behavior and CU traits in adolescence. This study showed that the FCU can mitigate polygenic risk, supporting the benefit of early psychosocial prevention programs. Importantly, this study showed initial evidence that prevention programs targeting early childhood conduct problems could potentially reduce rates of justice system involvement, including arrests and incarceration, by the age of 19.
Date Created
2024
Agent

Self-compassion Versus Reappraisal Following Social Rejection: An Application of the Situated Action Cycle

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Description
Identifying transtheoretical mechanisms of self-compassion is important for understanding its use as a treatment approach for depression and anxiety. This study examined the effectiveness of self-compassion and detached reappraisal on mechanisms involved in the processing of rejection, namely attention, appraisals,

Identifying transtheoretical mechanisms of self-compassion is important for understanding its use as a treatment approach for depression and anxiety. This study examined the effectiveness of self-compassion and detached reappraisal on mechanisms involved in the processing of rejection, namely attention, appraisals, and affect. Rejection is a common experience that can increase individuals risk for poor mental health outcomes, especially among those with rejection sensitivity. Outcomes are framed within the Situated Action Cycle, which offers an integrated approach to examining mechanisms of cognitive, affective, and behavioral processing. Online participants who reported at least moderate levels of rejection sensitivity were recruited to participate in the study. Study 1 documented that recalling an experience of rejection led to rejection-related emotions as opposed to conflict-related emotions, as expected. Additionally, a brief self-compassion writing induction produced expected increases in state self-compassion and positive affect, but also unexpected increases in state reappraisal. A brief detached reappraisal induction led to unexpected decreases in state reappraisal, particularly for those with marginalized identities. Study 2, which included a neutral control condition, found that brief self-compassion training increased negative attention bias and controllability appraisals and decreased positive affect. Detached reappraisal led to greater reductions in positive affect compared to both self-compassion and control conditions. Further, detached reappraisal led to increases in negative affect compared to the self-compassion condition. Changes observed from pre- to post-intervention in attentional, cognitive, and affective measures were not sustained following a Cyberball rejection manipulation administered one day later. Results from the study reveal nonsuperior effects of either intervention and possible mechanisms of self-compassion interventions for individuals with rejection sensitivity. Self-compassion may be a useful strategy to help individuals with rejection sensitivity attend to the negative emotions experienced during rejection with greater equanimity but may lead to reductions in positive affect. Further work is needed to determine whether the potential benefits of continued self-compassion training outweigh the mixed effects of brief self-compassion training and whether such benefits are superior to other evidence-based approaches.
Date Created
2023
Agent

Do Physical Activity and Sleep Health Predict Chronic Pain in Middle Childhood? An Examination of Direct and Moderated Effects of Health Behaviors

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Description
Chronic pain is common during childhood and has negative immediate and long-term implications for physical and mental health. Prior research points to physical activity and sleep as protective health-promoting behaviors predicting lower chronic pain intensity and disability during adulthood. No

Chronic pain is common during childhood and has negative immediate and long-term implications for physical and mental health. Prior research points to physical activity and sleep as protective health-promoting behaviors predicting lower chronic pain intensity and disability during adulthood. No study has yet examined the interaction of physical activity and sleep parameters in prediction of chronic pain in a community sample of children. Guided by the biopsychosocial model of pediatric chronic pain, this study explored objectively assessed physical activity and sleep patterns at age 8 as predictors of childhood chronic pain at age 9 in a racially/ethnically and socioeconomically diverse sample of 896 twins participating in the longitudinal Arizona Twin Project. It was hypothesized that parameters of physical activity levels and sleep health would independently predict chronic pain one year later, and that sleep parameters would moderate the association between physical activity and chronic pain. Monthly chronic pain was common, with 57.1% of participants reporting at least one pain location. Headaches, stomachaches, and backaches were the most frequent chronic pain presentations. Participants exceeded physical activity guidelines but did not meet sleep recommendations for their age group. Multilevel modeling analyses revealed that physical activity and sleep parameters at age 8 did not predict chronic pain one year later, and that sleep parameters did not moderate the associations between physical activity and chronic pain. The present study provides evidence that the associations between objectively assessed physical activity and sleep and chronic pain are not yet evident during middle childhood in this community sample compared to patient samples who have existing pain, suggesting that these health behaviors may play distinct roles in pain development versus pain management. They also point to the need to pinpoint the time frame during which these health behaviors become relevant and potentially interact to predict chronic pain development and maintenance. Longitudinal research tracking these health behaviors and pain using both subjective and objective methods as children transition into and through adolescence can help to identify optimal developmental stages at which to target prevention and intervention efforts to promote long term health.
Date Created
2023
Agent

Does Negative Emotion Differentiation Buffer the Effects of Daily Pain on Stress in Individuals with Chronic Pain?

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Description
Chronic pain is among the most prevalent health issues experienced by older adults and negatively impacts daily functioning and psychosocial well-being through mechanisms that include energy depletion, pain interference, and pain-related changes in negative affect. The capacities to be aware

Chronic pain is among the most prevalent health issues experienced by older adults and negatively impacts daily functioning and psychosocial well-being through mechanisms that include energy depletion, pain interference, and pain-related changes in negative affect. The capacities to be aware of and regulate negative emotions play a critical role in the successful management of chronic pain. One dimension of negative emotion awareness, termed negative emotion differentiation (NED), is the ability to discriminate between negative affective experiences and recognize them as discrete categories. The ability to identify and distinguish between the various emotions that accompany pain flares and other stressors may enhance the precision of the individual’s regulatory efforts. In doing so, NED may be one possible resilience resource that can facilitate adaptive functioning in the context of chronic pain by buffering the effects of chronic pain flares on daily interpersonal stress. However, this has not yet been investigated. The current study aimed to examine the moderating effect of trait NED on the relationship between daily pain and same-day stress in 259 patients diagnosed with osteoarthritis (OA) or fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS). Individuals completed daily diaries each evening for 30 days reporting on average daily pain, negative emotions, interpersonal stress, and depressive symptoms. It was hypothesized that higher levels of NED would buffer the effects of daily pain on same-day stress. In exploratory analyses, it was evaluated whether the buffering effects were larger for individuals with FMS versus OA. Results of multilevel models revealed that, as expected, higher levels of trait NED predicted lower levels of same-day negative interpersonal events and perceived interpersonal stress. Trait NED also moderated the relationship between pain-related increases in same-day perceived interpersonal stress. Additionally, findings indicated that NED was similarly important for those with FMS and OA. Taken together, the current findings suggest that NED is an important resilience trait that can attenuate chronic pain-related increases in daily experiences of interpersonal stress.
Date Created
2022
Agent