How Parenting Can Cause Antisocial Behaviors In Children - Study

A study has revealed the less parental warmth and more harshness in the home environment affect how aggressive children become and whether they lack empathy and a moral compass.

This was made known after researchers at the University of Michigan, University of Pennsylvania and Michigan State University studied 227 pairs of identical twins.

The researchers analysed small differences in the parenting that each twin experienced to determine whether these differences predict the likelihood of anti-social behaviours emerging.

Findings by the researchers showed that the twin, who experienced stricter or harsher treatment and less emotional warmth from parents had a greater chance of showing aggression and a lack of empathy and moral compass, a set of characteristics known as callous-unemotional traits.

Parents of the twins completed a 50-item questionnaire about the home environment, the researchers revealed.

The researchers also established their harshness and warmth levels by rating 24 statements such as “I often lose my temper with my child” and “My child knows I love him/her.”

They assessed child behaviour by asking the mother to report on 35 traits related to aggression and callous-unemotional traits.

“The study convincingly shows that parenting, and not just genes, contributes to the development of risky callous-unemotional traits,” said Luke Hyde, University of Michigan associate professor of psychology.

“Because identical twins have the same DNA, we can be more sure that the differences in parenting the twins received affects the development of these traits.”

A potential next step is to turn these findings into useable interventions for families trying to prevent a child from developing such traits or to improve troubling behaviours that have already begun.

Even though an intervention with parents could succeed, the researchers stress that the work isn’t blaming parents for their child’s CU or aggressive behaviours.

“Our previous work with adopted children also showed that genes do matter, and so there is a back and forth,” Hyde said.

“Some children may be more difficult to parent. The most important message is that treatments that work with parents likely can help, even for the most at-risk children.”

Meanwhile, the study has been published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.





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