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The present study examined the longitudinal associations between three dimensions of temperament - activity, affect-extraversion, and task orientation - and childhood aggression. Using 131 monozygotic and 173 dizygotic (86 same-sex) twin pairs from the Louisville Twin Study, we elucidated the ages, from 6 to 36 months, at which each temperament dimension began to correlate with aggression at age 7. We employed latent growth modeling to show that developmental increases (i.e., slopes) in activity were positively associated with aggression, whereas increases in affect-extraversion and task orientation were negatively associated with aggression. Genetically informed models revealed that correlations between temperament and aggression were primarily explained by common genetic variance, with nonshared environmental variance accounting for a small proportion of each correlation by 36 months. Genetic variance explained the correlations of the slopes of activity and task orientation with aggression. Nonshared environmental variance accounted for almost half of the correlation between the slopes of affect-extraversion and aggression. Exploratory analyses revealed quantitative sex differences in each temperament-aggression association. By establishing which dimensions of temperament correlate with aggression, as well as when and how they do so, our work informs the development of future child and family interventions for children at highest risk of aggression.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954579424000634 | DOI Listing |
J Public Child Welf
June 2025
City University of New York, Hunter College, United States.
This pilot study sought to examine the acceptability of implementing a modified behavioral parent training program, the 4Rs and 2Ss intervention, within a Child Welfare (CW) placement prevention service. CW staff (=12; caseplanners (=6), supervisors (=4), and administrators (=2)) and CW-involved families (=12) completed surveys which were followed by semi-structured interviews and a focus group to explore the acceptability of implementing the modified 4Rs and 2Ss in the CW setting. All quantitative benchmarks for high acceptability were met (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurol
August 2025
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Shaoguan First People's Hospital, Shaoguan, China.
Backgrounds: In clinical practice, many patients cannot undergo inpatient rehabilitation in hospitals for extended periods due to personal financial constraints, as well as China's health insurance policy. They are often forced to terminate their rehabilitation training during the prime recovery phase. This makes tele-rehabilitation-based, home-based rehabilitation particularly important.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Sports Act Living
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus.
Introduction: In this study, we investigated the involvement of different aspects of attention in a light training task requiring fast physical responses to targets.
Methods: Fifty adult participants carried out drills in SpeedPad, a Virtual Reality (VR) adaptation of the Batak Pro and the Fitlight Trainer systems commonly used by athletes of various sports. Participants also carried out three established cognitive tasks on a desktop computer: the Posner cueing task, a visual conjunction search task, and a Motion Object Tracking (MOT) task.
Clinical apathy might result from either a diminished willingness to exert effort for known rewards or from reduced motivation to explore potentially beneficial future opportunities. To identify the underlying cognitive and neural bases of apathy, we used task-based fMRI to examine motivated choice computations in patients with chronic traumatic brain injury (TBI)-a condition frequently associated with apathy-and compared their behavior and neural activity to that of healthy controls (CTRLs). Participants performed two choice tasks involving distinct types of motivational tradeoffs: i) An effort-value tradeoff task (the 'Apples Task') requiring them to decide how much physical effort they were willing to exert for varying reward magnitudes, and ii) An explore-exploit tradeoff task (the 'Novelty-Bandit Task') requiring them to choose between exploiting options with a known history of reward or exploring novel options with uncertain but potentially higher future value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Processes
September 2025
University of Rostock, Institute for Biosciences, Neuroethology, Rostock, Germany. Electronic address:
Reversal learning (RL) experiments explore cognitive flexibility and decision-making processes. Specifically, RL examines the extent and speed at which individuals adapt their choices when reward contingencies change after the point of reversal. One variation of RL is the midsession reversal learning experiment (MRL), in which the point of reversal occurs midway through a session.
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