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1 endence, drug abuse or dependence, and adult antisocial behavior).
2 val, 2.02-3.94; P < .001 for the most severe antisocial behavior).
3 eficits contribute to the emergence of later antisocial behavior.
4 isorder that in some cases is accompanied by antisocial behavior.
5 attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and antisocial behavior.
6 ls have been related to conduct problems and antisocial behavior.
7 er the developing brain in ways that promote antisocial behavior.
8 even for those offenders with a diagnosis of antisocial behavior.
9 range moderates the influence of genotype on antisocial behavior.
10 tic basis for the comorbidity between DV and antisocial behavior.
11 ajor depression, conduct disorder, and adult antisocial behavior.
12 linical referral biases, or covariation with antisocial behavior.
13 st pronounced for conduct disorder and adult antisocial behavior.
14 ve disorder to substance abuse as well as to antisocial behavior.
15 environmental background, and eventual adult antisocial behavior.
16 ed in the context of developmental models of antisocial behavior.
17 the adult outcomes of adolescent girls with antisocial behavior.
18 known to be strong predictors of adolescent antisocial behavior.
19 tion-seeking, fearlessness, and body size to antisocial behavior.
20 ponents were significant predictors of adult antisocial behavior.
21 tal factors known to place youth at risk for antisocial behavior.
22 arents that place these children at risk for antisocial behavior.
23 re selected on the basis of a risk scale for antisocial behavior.
24 or the prevention of trajectories to serious antisocial behavior.
25 ed by the design of environments, can foster antisocial behavior.
26 otional behaviors posed by biological mother antisocial behavior.
27 understanding both the form and emergence of antisocial behavior.
28 itivity in individuals who engage in chronic antisocial behavior.
29 sk of developing persistent and severe adult antisocial behavior.
30 ponent of human morality and is disturbed in antisocial behavior.
31 e development and prevention of violence and antisocial behavior.
32 llous-unemotional traits with inflexible and antisocial behavior.
33 the relation between adverse life events and antisocial behavior.
34 moral decision making and its disturbance in antisocial behavior.
35 treatment was not a significant predictor of antisocial behavior.
36 tial neurocognitive biomarker for persistent antisocial behavior.
37 numerous findings surrounding correlates of antisocial behavior.
38 ships and increases risk for psychopathy and antisocial behavior.
39 ich may partly account for their violent and antisocial behavior.
40 onment, thus contributing to impulsivity and antisocial behavior.
41 marriage is negatively associated with male antisocial behavior.
42 ng under conditions of ambiguity may promote antisocial behavior.
43 sly been shown to be associated with extreme antisocial behavior.
44 ins and persisted when controlling for prior antisocial behavior.
45 otype but may not lie on the risk pathway to antisocial behavior.
46 ng behaviors, including conduct disorder and antisocial behavior.
47 s for understanding the neural correlates of antisocial behavior.
48 mes (99% CI, 1.3 to 2.2) more likely to have antisocial behaviors.
49 on with greater serotonergic abnormality and antisocial behaviors.
50 ationship between childhood maltreatment and antisocial behaviors.
51 hip between childhood maltreatment and adult antisocial behaviors.
52 rospective study investigating predictors of antisocial behavior, 38 younger brothers of convicted de
55 rnalizing disorders (conduct disorder, adult antisocial behavior, alcohol dependence, and drug depend
56 e intervention for children at high risk for antisocial behavior alters stress response in anticipati
57 in substance use, problems with police, and antisocial behavior among 1,517 participants in 80 neigh
58 ersonality disorder associated with severely antisocial behavior and a host of cognitive and affectiv
59 Psychopathy is associated with persistent antisocial behavior and a striking lack of regret for th
60 l bases of impulsivity and their relation to antisocial behavior and adversity are poorly understood.
61 n line with data from studies of adults with antisocial behavior and callous-unemotional traits (i.e.
62 dhood signal higher risk for trajectories of antisocial behavior and callous-unemotional traits that
63 between parental substance use disorders and antisocial behavior and childhood disruptive disorders i
65 e relationship between genetic liability for antisocial behavior and CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (
68 tation by nurses can reduce reported serious antisocial behavior and emergent use of substances on th
69 d as a psychological mechanism that inhibits antisocial behavior and facilitates the formation of tig
71 andardized assessments including measures of antisocial behavior and IQ.Main Outcome Measure DSM-IV s
72 tudies detailing the phenomenology of female antisocial behavior and longitudinal investigations that
74 tribute to understanding the neurobiology of antisocial behavior and potentially provide useful tools
75 l mothers had significantly higher levels of antisocial behavior and rates of DSM-IV conduct disorder
77 ay comprise a neural substrate for impulsive-antisocial behavior and substance abuse in psychopathy.
79 onmental, and phenotypic relationships among antisocial behavior and substance use disorders indicate
80 thin individuals at specific points in time: antisocial behavior and substance use were 3.37 times mo
81 uent marginalization in society, may lead to antisocial behavior and violence, threatening societal s
82 Symptom counts of conduct disorder, adult antisocial behavior, and alcohol, nicotine, and drug dep
85 hol dependence, drug abuse/dependence, adult antisocial behavior, and conduct disorder; the second, o
86 ependence, childhood conduct disorder, adult antisocial behavior, and disinhibitory personality trait
89 ps; MAOA genotype; indices of aggressive and antisocial behavior; and statistical test of genotype-en
91 pairment associated with callous-unemotional antisocial behavior are already present in childhood.
92 pathy and personal distress to prosocial and antisocial behavior are discussed, as is the relation of
95 zing disorders of conduct disorder and adult antisocial behavior are significantly influenced by the
97 negativity and low warmth predicting overall antisocial behavior, as well as aggressive and nonaggres
98 n between maternal depression and children's antisocial behavior (ASB) may come about because (1) dep
100 on cohort of 561 families, history of severe antisocial behavior assessed in biological mothers and o
101 elements of antisocial personality, namely, antisocial behavior (assessed by a diagnostic interview)
102 els of direct punishment, individuals punish antisocial behavior at a personal cost, whereas in model
103 lower scores for schizotypal personality and antisocial behavior at age 17 years and for criminal beh
105 poor nutrition at age 3 years predisposes to antisocial behavior at ages 8, 11, and 17 years, 2) such
106 ice problems: 31% of youths who had reported antisocial behavior at baseline reported police problems
110 d resemblance on substance use disorders and antisocial behavior can be accounted for by the transmis
111 te effects of childhood maltreatment on male antisocial behaviors, confirming a sentinel finding in r
114 nce on males often centers on aggression and antisocial behavior, contemporary theorists have propose
115 ation between prenatal smoking and offspring antisocial behavior depended on inherited factors becaus
116 .g., family conflict, serious accidents) and antisocial behaviors (e.g., precocious sexual activity,
117 , such that the married twin engaged in less antisocial behavior following marriage than his unmarrie
118 linic-referred 3- to 7-year-olds with severe antisocial behavior for whom treatment was indicated, 93
119 is review establishes that female adolescent antisocial behavior has important long-term individual a
126 ed physiological correlate of aggressive and antisocial behavior in children and adolescents, but whe
128 typically developing boys, those at risk for antisocial behavior in general (irrespective of their ri
129 ity COMT genotype in ADHD is associated with antisocial behavior in part via impaired social understa
134 f low socioeconomic status (risk factors for antisocial behavior), in contrast with those in the comp
135 wever, many of the most significant forms of antisocial behavior, including crime, reflect the outcom
136 ient incentive processing and persistence of antisocial behavior into adulthood or its relation with
137 ssing is related to persistence of childhood antisocial behavior into late adolescence and to callous
140 tification of factors that predict recurrent antisocial behavior is integral to the social sciences,
142 resemblance for substance use disorders and antisocial behavior is primarily due to the genetic tran
143 at the relationship between maltreatment and antisocial behavior may be moderated by a genetic vulner
144 nteraction, childhood maltreatment predicted antisocial behavior more strongly in male subjects carry
145 otype, in the presence of ADHD, with extreme antisocial behavior (odds ratio, 2.82; 95% confidence in
146 m follow-up compared with the control group (antisocial behavior: odds ratio of oppositional defiant
147 fore represent a motivational factor for the antisocial behavior of those with elevated secondary psy
149 natal smoking may be particularly related to antisocial behavior outcomes in male offspring and subst
150 no contact with offspring, biological mother antisocial behavior predicted early callous-unemotional
151 sities, whereas maltreatment alone predicted antisocial behaviors preferentially, but weakly, in fema
152 inhibition, hypersensitivity to amphetamine, antisocial behaviors, reduced anxiety-like behavior in t
153 ntile of the distribution on a self-reported antisocial behavior scale were matched with an equal num
156 interest were 18 items tapping four domains: antisocial behavior, substance use/abuse, depressive sym
157 personality traits that are associated with antisocial behavior such as impulsivity and novelty seek
158 opathic traits, who present with violent and antisocial behaviors, tend to value other people only in
159 s to explore whether major depression and/or antisocial behavior tended to occur more frequently amon
160 ural endophenotypes of heightened or extreme antisocial behavior tendencies have been identified in,
161 y disorder is a clinically severe variant of antisocial behavior that is associated with a particular
162 ppositional behavior are at risk for serious antisocial behavior that may persist into adolescence an
164 rait aggression is a measure used to predict antisocial behavior, these results underscore the releva
166 ngth of the association between genotype and antisocial behavior was unchanged by including executive
168 tive measures of schizotypal personality and antisocial behavior were obtained when the subjects were
171 Genetic influence was greater for adolescent antisocial behavior when parenting was more negative or
173 09 high-risk 4- to 6-year-olds with elevated antisocial behavior who were selectively screened from t
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