Author/Authors :
Jackson، نويسنده , , Dylan B. and Beaver، نويسنده , , Kevin M.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
AbstractPurpose
edson and Hirschi (1990) contend that low self-control is the result of parental management techniques. However, an emerging line of research has revealed that neuropsychological deficits influence the development of low self-control (Beaver, Wright, & Delisi, 2007; Cauffman, Steinberg, & Piquero, 2005). Nevertheless, these studies have largely tested the effects of neuropsychological deficits on low self-control cross-sectionally or in the short term. This study addresses an important void in the literature by examining the influence of neuropsychological deficits in early childhood on levels of self-control and misconduct through early adolescence.
s
ome from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Survey, Kindergarten (ECLS-K), the largest nationally representative sample of U.S. children.
s
nd that deficits in neuropsychological functioning during kindergarten were consistently predictive of lower levels of self-control during the third, fifth, and eighth grade as well as higher levels of conduct problems during the eighth grade. These effects remained significant after accounting for demographic variables, features of the neighborhood, and a number of parenting variables.
sions
sychological deficits during early childhood play an important role in the development of low self-control through early adolescence and misconduct during early adolescence.