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Journal Article

Citation

Eley TC, Lichtenstein P, Stevenson J. Child Dev. 1999; 70(1): 155-168.

Affiliation

Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Research Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK. t.eley@iop.bpmf.ac.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10191520

Abstract

Recent theory and results from twin and adoption studies of children and adolescents suggest greater genetic influence on aggressive as compared to nonaggressive antisocial behavior. In addition, quantitative or qualitative differences in the etiology of these behaviors in males and females have been indicated in the literature. The Child Behavior Checklist was completed by the parents of 1022 Swedish twin pairs aged 7-9 years and of 501 British twin pairs aged 8-16 years. Genetic factors influenced aggressive antisocial behavior to a far greater extent than nonaggressive antisocial behavior, which was also significantly influenced by the shared environment. There was a significant sex difference in the etiology of nonaggressive antisocial behavior. Bivariate analyses supported the conclusion that the etiologies of aggressive and nonaggressive antisocial behavior differ for males and females.


Language: en

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