Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
359667 Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examine specific, unique interplays of individual factors.•Low sadness and high anger reactivity directly predict externalizing behavior.•Low attention focusing directly predicts externalizing behavior.•Anger reactivity and attention shifting interact to predict externalizing behavior.

The present study examined the contribution of early reactivity and regulation on externalizing behavior in preadolescence. Moreover, subcomponents of attentional control (i.e., attention shifting and attention focusing) and negative reactivity (i.e., sadness and anger) were examined individually to test whether a specific combination of factors uniquely contributed to the outcome. A subset of data were utilized from the ongoing, longitudinal RIGHT Track project (N = 404), in which parents reported on individual factors at age 4 and teachers reported on externalizing behavior at age 10. A hierarchical linear regression analysis revealed a significant interaction between anger reactivity and attention shifting when controlling for early externalizing behavior, where children with high levels of anger and low levels of attention shifting experienced the greatest increase in externalizing behavior over time. An increased focus on specificity is needed in research on the interplay between reactivity and regulation in the prediction of externalizing behavior.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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