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Journal Article

Citation

Baillargeon RH, Sward GD, Keenan K, Cao G. Infancy 2011; 16(4): 418-434.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, International Society on Infant Studies, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1532-7078.2010.00043.x

PMID

32693514

Abstract

Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that even in the midst of the "terrible twos," frequent/severe oppositional-defiant behaviors (ODBs) are not common among toddlers and hence may be indicative of a significant opposition-defiance problem. The main objective of this study was to obtain a maximum likelihood estimate of the proportion of toddlers in the general population who are reported to exhibit ODBs on a frequent basis, and to test for gender differences therein. Data came from The Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development, a survey of a representative birth cohort of children from the Canadian province of Québec. Multigroup latent class analysis was used to distinguish between toddlers who exhibit ODBs on a frequent basis and those who do so only occasionally or not at all. The results show that 12.4% of 17-month-old boys and girls exhibit ODBs on a frequent basis. Further, the results show a strong positive association between opposition-defiance and physical aggression early in life, with a great majority of physically aggressive toddlers exhibiting ODBs on a frequent basis. In contrast, the results show that only a minority of toddlers who may be experiencing a significant opposition-defiance problem exhibit physically aggressive behaviors on a frequent basis.


Language: en

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