6533b7dafe1ef96bd126f4a8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Country, sex, and parent occupational status: Moderators of the continuity of aggression from childhood to adulthood

Kenneth A. DodgeLea PulkkinenPaul BoxerL. Rowell HuesmannSheryl L. OlsonEric F. DubowEric F. DubowSharon SimontonJohn E. BatesJennifer E. LansfordKatja KokkoGregory S. Pettit

subject

Longitudinal studyAggressionOccupational prestigeHuman factors and ergonomicsPoison controlSuicide preventionOccupational safety and healthDevelopmental psychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Injury preventionDevelopmental and Educational Psychologymedicinemedicine.symptomPsychologyGeneral PsychologyClinical psychology

description

Using data from two American and one Finnish long-term longitudinal studies, we examined continuity of general aggression from age 8 to physical aggression in early adulthood (age 21-30) and whether continuity of aggression differed by country, sex, and parent occupational status. In all samples, childhood aggression was assessed via peer nominations and early adulthood aggression via self-reports. Multi-group structural equation models revealed significant continuity in aggression in the American samples but not in the Finnish sample. These relations did not differ by sex but did differ by parent occupational status: whereas there was no significant continuity among American children from professional family-of-origin backgrounds, there was significant continuity among American children from non-professional backgrounds.

https://doi.org/10.1002/ab.21546