Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
ArticleSex Differences in the Interaction between Temperament and Parenting
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The longitudinal association between temperament and physical activity in young children
2018, Preventive MedicineCitation Excerpt :Further support for this explanation comes from population-based studies of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), a disorder that affects twice as many boys as girls (Larson et al., 2011), which confirm that boys with ADHD in early childhood are at increased risk of depression at adolescent and older ages (Larson et al., 2011) (an example of heterotypic continuity). Other plausible explanations for the discordant gender findings in our study include potential differential parenting responses to girls and boys who are distressed or difficult to soothe (Bezirganian and Cohen, 1992), different parenting approaches for boys and girls regarding physical activity (Jago et al., 2011; St George and Wilson, 2012), or more direct effects of a common underlying etiological basis for both depression and obesity-related cardiometabolic risk that are detectable early in the lifecourse. Several studies, for example, have implicated common pathophysiological pathways in the etiology of both conditions, including disturbances in the HPA axis and norepinephrine systems (Gold, 2015), potentially shared genetic vulnerabilities (Krabbe et al., 2007), and increased immuno-inflammatory activity (Chaves Filho et al., 2018; Rethorst et al., 2014).
Temperament: Half a century in the Journal
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