Behavioral inhibition, negative parenting, and social withdrawal: Longitudinal associations with loneliness during early, middle, and late adolescence
Publication year
2023Number of pages
17 p.
Source
Child Development, 94, 2, (2023), pp. 512-528ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ BSI OGG
SW OZ BSI KLP
PI Group Affective Neuroscience
Journal title
Child Development
Volume
vol. 94
Issue
iss. 2
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 512
Page end
p. 528
Subject
230 Affective Neuroscience; Developmental Psychopathology; Experimental Psychopathology and TreatmentAbstract
Adolescent loneliness can have detrimental effects on physical and mental health, but there is limited understanding of its antecedents in infancy and childhood. A 20-year longitudinal, multi-informant, and multi-methods study (first data collection in 1998) was conducted to examine mechanisms underlying adolescent loneliness (N = 128, 52% boys, Mage_baseline = 1.23, SD = 0.02, 99% White, recruitment in Dutch urban, healthcare centers). Structural equation modeling showed that high infant behavioral inhibition (BI) was indirectly associated with high loneliness during adolescence via high childhood social withdrawal. This indirect effect was equally strong during early, middle, and late adolescence. Contrary to expectations, infant parenting did not moderate the relation between BI and social withdrawal. The results suggest a developmental cascade with infant BI showing long-lasting indirect effects on adolescent loneliness up to 20 years later via childhood social withdrawal.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [227587]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3605]
- Electronic publications [108623]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28519]
- Open Access publications [77825]
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