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A twin study exploring the association between childhood emotional and behaviour problems and specific psychotic experiences in a community sample of adolescents
Author(s) -
Shakoor Sania,
McGuire Philip,
Cardno Alastair G.,
Freeman Daniel,
Ronald Angelica
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of child psychology and psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.652
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1469-7610
pISSN - 0021-9630
DOI - 10.1111/jcpp.12839
Subject(s) - psychology , developmental psychology , paranoia , association (psychology) , anhedonia , psychopathology , cognition , grandiosity , structural equation modeling , twin study , clinical psychology , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , psychiatry , social psychology , psychotherapist , statistics , mathematics , heritability , narcissism , biology , genetics
Background Childhood emotional and behaviour problems are antecedents for later psychopathology. This study investigated genetic and environmental influences shaping the longitudinal association between childhood emotional and behaviour problems and specific PE s. Method In a community‐based twin sample, parents reported on emotional and behaviour problems when twins were ages 7 and 12 years. At age 16 years, specific PE s were measured using self‐reports and parent reports. Structural equation model‐fitting was conducted. Results Childhood emotional and behaviour problems were significantly associated with paranoia, cognitive disorganisation and parent‐rated negative symptoms in adolescence (mean r = .15–.38), and to a lesser extent with hallucinations, grandiosity and anhedonia (mean r = .04‐.12). Genetic influences on childhood emotional and behaviour problems explained significant proportions of variance in adolescent paranoia (4%), cognitive disorganisation (8%) and parent‐rated negative symptoms (3%). Unique environmental influences on childhood emotional and behaviour problems explained ≤1% of variance in PE s. Common environmental influences were only relevant for the relationship between childhood emotional and behaviour problems and parent‐rated negative symptoms (explaining 28% of variance) and are partly due to correlated rater effects. Conclusions Childhood emotional and behaviour problems are significantly, if weakly, associated with adolescent PE s. These associations are driven in part by common genetic influences underlying both emotional and behaviour problems and PE s. However, psychotic experiences in adolescence are largely influenced by genetic and environmental factors that are independent of general childhood emotional and behaviour problems, suggesting they are not merely an extension of childhood emotional and behaviour problems.