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Objective: Callous-unemotional traits (CU), characterized as a lack of guilt and empathy, and irritability, a tendency to show anger and frustration, are 2 risk factors for externalizing behavioral problems. Externalizing problems, CU, and irritability are all heritable. However, there is a dearth of studies examining the genetic and environmental associations between the 3 domains. The present study partitioned joint and independent etiological pathways from CU and irritability to externalizing problems.
Method: The sample consisted of 614 pairs of 3-year-old twins from the Boston University Twin Project. Primary caregivers reported twins' externalizing problems, CU, and irritability using the Child Behavior Checklist. Biometric Cholesky models were used to estimate common and unique genetic and environmental variances among the 3 domains.
Results: There were common genetic, shared environmental and nonshared environmental factors operating across all 3 domains. In addition, there were unique genetic and nonshared environmental factors, independent of the common effects, linking externalizing problems and CU, and externalizing problems and irritability, respectively. There were also genetic and nonshared environmental influences unique to externalizing problems, independent of CU and irritability.
Conclusion: Common genetic as well as shared and nonshared environmental associations among externalizing problems, CU, and irritability suggest, to some extent, that etiological influences are common to all 3 constructs. However, distinct genetic and child-specific nonshared environmental links separately from CU and irritability to externalizing problems, reveals the heterogeneity of externalizing problems, and suggests that they should not be considered a unitary outcome.
Study Preregistration Information: Study Preregistration: Understanding the Etiology of Externalizing Problems in Young Children: The Roles of Callous-Unemotional Traits and Irritability; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2023.09.549.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2025.01.005 | DOI Listing |
Alpha Psychiatry
August 2025
Center for Studies of Psychological Application, Guangdong Key Laboratory of Mental Health and Cognitive Science, and School of Psychology, South China Normal University, 510631 Guangzhou, Guangdong, China.
Background: Children's mental health is significantly influenced by family environments, where multiple risks often coexist, exert unequal impacts, and combine in different configurations that can result in diverse developmental outcomes. This study examines how different configurations of cumulative family risks influence mental health symptoms in Chinese children using a novel person-centered approach.
Materials And Methods: Data were collected through a large-scale, semester-based comprehensive survey of 34,041 children in Grades 4 to 6 in an economically underdeveloped county-level city in Guangdong, China, during November and December, 2022.
JAACAP Open
September 2025
University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Objective: Parental postpartum depression (PPD) is a documented risk factor for mental health problems in childhood, but little is known about its interplay with family socioeconomic status (SES). This study tested the interactive effect of SES in the associations of PPD with mental health symptoms in children from infancy to adolescence.
Method: Data used for this study were from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development.
JAACAP Open
September 2025
Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, Maryland.
Objective: To identify correlates of deliberate self-harm (DSH) in youth with autism and/or intellectual disability (ID).
Method: This retrospective longitudinal cohort analysis used claims data for youth ages 5 to 24 years continuously enrolled in Medicaid in a midwestern state for 6 months and diagnosed with autism and/or ID between 2010 and 2020 (N = 41,230). Cox proportional hazards regression examined associations between demographic and clinical variables and time to DSH for study cohorts with autism and/or ID.