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      The Interaction Between Neighborhood Disadvantage and Genetic Factors in the Prediction of Antisocial Outcomes

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      Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice
      SAGE Publications

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          USING THE CORRECT STATISTICAL TEST FOR THE EQUALITY OF REGRESSION COEFFICIENTS

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            The new look of behavioral genetics in developmental psychopathology: gene-environment interplay in antisocial behaviors.

            This article reviews behavioral-genetic research to show how it can help address questions of causation in developmental psychopathology. The article focuses on studies of antisocial behavior, because these have been leading the way in investigating environmental as well as genetic influences on psychopathology. First, the article illustrates how behavioral-genetic methods are being newly applied to detect the best candidates for genuine environmental causes among the many risk factors for antisocial behavior. Second, the article examines findings of interaction between genes and environments (G x E) associated with antisocial behavior, outlining steps for testing hypotheses of measured G x E. Third, the article envisages future work on gene-environment interplay, arguing that it is an interesting and profitable way forward for psychopathology research. Copyright 2005 APA, all rights reserved.
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              Durable effects of concentrated disadvantage on verbal ability among African-American children.

              Disparities in verbal ability, a major predictor of later life outcomes, have generated widespread debate, but few studies have been able to isolate neighborhood-level causes in a developmentally and ecologically appropriate way. This study presents longitudinal evidence from a large-scale study of >2,000 children ages 6-12 living in Chicago, along with their caretakers, who were followed wherever they moved in the U.S. for up to 7 years. African-American children are exposed in such disproportionate numbers to concentrated disadvantage that white and Latino children cannot be reliably compared, calling into question traditional research strategies assuming common points of overlap in ecological risk. We therefore focus on trajectories of verbal ability among African-American children, extending recently developed counterfactual methods for time-varying causes and outcomes to adjust for a wide range of predictors of selection into and out of neighborhoods. The results indicate that living in a severely disadvantaged neighborhood reduces the later verbal ability of black children on average by approximately 4 points, a magnitude that rivals missing a year or more of schooling.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice
                Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice
                SAGE Publications
                1541-2040
                1556-9330
                November 06 2011
                November 06 2011
                : 10
                : 1
                : 25-40
                Article
                10.1177/1541204011422085
                b751f55e-7781-4f7c-b39e-fed5f28be83b
                © 2011

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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