Authors
Laura W Wesseldijk, Meike Bartels, Jacqueline M Vink, Catharina EM van Beijsterveldt, Lannie Ligthart, Dorret I Boomsma, Christel M Middeldorp
Publication date
2018/9
Journal
European child & adolescent psychiatry
Volume
27
Issue
9
Pages
1123-1132
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Description
Conduct problems in children and adolescents can predict antisocial personality disorder and related problems, such as crime and conviction. We sought an explanation for such predictions by performing a genetic longitudinal analysis. We estimated the effects of genetic, shared environmental, and unique environmental factors on variation in conduct problems measured at childhood and adolescence and antisocial personality problems measured at adulthood and on the covariation across ages. We also tested whether these estimates differed by sex. Longitudinal data were collected in the Netherlands Twin Register over a period of 27 years. Age appropriate and comparable measures of conduct and antisocial personality problems, assessed with the Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment, were available for 9783 9–10-year-old, 6839 13–18-year-old, and 7909 19–65-year-old twin pairs …
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