Publications by authors named "Lydia Gabriela Speyer"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the relationship between prosocial and antisocial behaviors during early adolescence, focusing on how they develop and interact over time.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 1,526 participants (51% male) at ages 11, 13, and 15, using advanced statistical models.
  • Findings suggest that while general prosociality doesn’t significantly reduce aggressive behaviors, teacher-reported prosociality may help lower instances of bullying, indicating the importance of fostering prosocial behaviors to mitigate antisocial actions in young adolescents.
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Recent technological advances have provided new opportunities for the collection of intensive longitudinal data. Using methods such as dynamic structural equation modeling, these data can provide new insights into moment-to-moment dynamics of psychological and behavioral processes. In intensive longitudinal data ( > 20), researchers often have theories that imply that factors that change from moment to moment within individuals act as moderators.

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Random-Intercept Cross-Lagged Panel Models allow for the decomposition of measurements into between- and within-person components and have hence become popular for testing developmental hypotheses. Here, we describe how developmental researchers can implement, test and interpret interaction effects in such models using an empirical example from developmental psychopathology research. We illustrate the analysis of and interactions utilising data from the United Kingdom-based Millennium Cohort Study within a Bayesian Structural Equation Modelling framework.

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Background: There is limited evidence on how the classification of maternal metabolic syndrome during pregnancy affects children's developmental outcomes and the possible mediators of this association. This study uses a cohort sample of 12,644 to 13,832 mother-child pairs from the UK Born in Bradford Study to examine the associations between maternal metabolic syndrome classification (MetS) and child development outcomes at age 5, using cord blood markers as candidate mediators.

Methods: Maternal cardiometabolic markers included diabetes, obesity, triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, blood pressure, hypertension, and fasting glucose during pregnancy.

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Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) methodologies are commonly used to illuminate the predictors and impacts of experiencing subjective stress in the course of daily life. The validity of inferences from this research is contingent on the availability of measures of perceived momentary stress that can provide valid and reliable momentary stress scores. However, studies of the development and validation of such measures have been lacking.

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Objective: Personality traits change in both mean levels and variance across the life span but the mechanisms underlying these developmental trends remain unclear. Social Investment Principle (SIP) suggests that social expectations drive personality changes in adulthood. Accordingly, we tested whether differences between personality traits in social expectations for them can explain their different change trajectories in young adulthood.

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Background: Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) has become a popular method of gathering information about participants as they go about their daily lives. However, participant non-compliance, especially non-random compliance, in EMA is a concern. Better knowledge of the moment-to-moment factors that predict prompt non-response can inform the design of strategies to mitigate it.

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The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) has been widely used to study children's psychosocial development longitudinally; however, such analyses assume longitudinal measurement invariance, that is, they presuppose that symptom manifestations are measured comparably across different ages. Violations of this assumption could bias longitudinal analyses and should therefore be empirically tested. This study tested longitudinal measurement invariance within a confirmatory factor analysis framework in the U.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study looks at how a mother's bad experiences as a child can affect her baby's health, specifically leading to issues like being born too early or underweight.
  • Researchers used data from a large study involving over 8,000 parents and children to understand the connections between different risks that mothers faced.
  • The findings showed that certain behaviors during pregnancy, like smoking and drug use, were key problems that linked past bad experiences to the health of the baby, suggesting these should be treated first to help future generations.
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Mental health disorders share substantial variance, prompting researchers to develop structural models that can capture both generalised psychopathology risk and disorder/symptom-specific variation. This study investigated the associations of the general and specific psychopathology factors with multiple personality trait hierarchy levels: broad domains, their facets and nuances (N = 1839 Estonian adults). A bi-factor model with a general 'p' factor and specific factors for internalising problems, thought disorders and substance use best represented psychopathology structure.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study looks at how personality traits change from when kids are young until they are almost adults and what influences those changes.
  • Researchers checked the personality traits of around 11,000 young people and gathered opinions from parents, teachers, and students about what they expect from these traits.
  • They found that, while expectations for personality traits stayed similar for different ages, the actual personality traits didn’t always match with how they thought they would change as kids grew up.
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Background: This paper enumerates and characterizes latent classes of adverse childhood experiences and investigates how they relate to prenatal substance use (i.e., smoking, alcohol, and other drugs) and poor infant outcomes (i.

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A maladaptive response to stress in individuals with high ADHD traits may be a key factor explaining co-occurring ADHD symptoms and internalising problems. The current study investigates whether between-person differences in ADHD traits are associated with differences in the within-person moment-to-moment coupling of stress and negative affect; and whether these can explain between-person differences in internalising problems (N = 262, median-age 20). Results of a dynamic structural equation model indicated that between-person differences in ADHD traits significantly moderated the daily life coupling between stress and negative affect.

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Adolescence is a critical period in the development of mental health with nearly 1 in 5 adolescents suffering from mental health problems and more than 40 percent of these experiencing at least one co-occurring mental health disorder. This study investigates whether there are differences in the relations between key dimensions of child and adolescent mental health in adolescence compared to childhood. Mental health and related socio-emotional traits were measured longitudinally at ages 4, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, and 16 in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (N = 11279) using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaires.

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Previous studies have offered evidence for peer problems and academic achievement as mediators in developmental cascades from externalising to internalising problems, and from ADHD symptoms to both internalising and externalising problems. However, these mediators have not been found to fully account for these cascades, indicating that there may be additional mediators involved. This study investigated the role of harsh parenting and parental involvement alongside academic achievement and peer problems in mediating within-person developmental cascades from externalising to internalising problems and from ADHD symptoms to internalising and externalising problems using autoregressive latent trajectory models with structured residuals.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers looked at how kids with ADHD can struggle with their emotions, which might lead to issues like anxiety and depression.
  • They used data from a big UK study where they followed kids from ages 3 to 7 to see how these problems are connected over time.
  • They found that when kids have trouble managing their emotions, it can increase the chance of having anxiety or depression if they also have ADHD symptoms.
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Article Synopsis
  • Patterson's coercion model explains how bad behavior in kids and poor parenting can create a cycle that makes things worse for both.
  • The study looked at how harsh parenting by mostly mothers affects kids' problems with behavior, attention, and emotions from ages 3 to 7.
  • Results showed that both parenting and children's behavior influence each other, meaning fixing parenting issues could help kids who are struggling emotionally or behaviorally.
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Article Synopsis
  • This study looked at how parents’ and kids’ mental health affects each other over time.
  • Researchers used surveys to measure parents' and children's mental health when kids were ages 3 to 17.
  • The results showed that both mothers and fathers’ mental health impacted their children's problems, and these effects worked both ways, meaning kids’ issues could also affect their parents' mental health.
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Many children who suffer from one mental health issue also suffer from at least one co-occurring disorder and a range of developmental psychopathology theories, including developmental cascade and network models, have been proposed to explain this widespread co-occurrence. Autoregressive latent trajectory models with structured residuals (ALT-SR) and multilevel graphical vector autoregression (GVAR) are recently proposed complementary approaches that can help operationalize and test these theories and provide new insights into the reciprocal relations between multiple mental health domains to advance the understanding of the development of co-occurring mental health problems. This study uses ALT-SR and multilevel GVAR models to analyze the temporal, contemporaneous, and between-person relations between key dimensions of child mental health: emotional problems, peer problems, conduct problems, hyperactivity/inattention, and prosociality as measured by the parent-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) in 17,478 children from the U.

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Objective: Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is one of the most prevalent childhood disorders, affecting around 3.4% of children worldwide. A common and impairing correlate of ADHD is aggressive behaviour.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated the joint developmental trajectories of internalizing (like anxiety and depression) and externalizing (like aggression and conduct issues) problems in children from ages 4 to 16, identifying five distinct classes of emotional and behavioral symptoms.
  • Using a large sample from the Avon Longitudinal Study, researchers found that male sex, lower maternal age, maternal mental health issues, and certain genetic risk factors were associated with higher levels of externalizing/internalizing problems.
  • The findings indicated that while it's easier to categorize affected and unaffected children, it was challenging to differentiate among the various affected groups, suggesting that both types of problems share many common risk factors.
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ADHD and internalising problems commonly co-occur with up to 50% of children diagnosed with ADHD also suffering from anxiety or depression. However, their developmental relations are currently not well understood. Longitudinal symptom level analyses can provide valuable insights into how difficulties in these areas of psychosocial functioning affect each other.

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Background And Objectives: Obtaining a multi-informant perspective is important when assessing mental health issues in childhood and adolescence. Obtaining ratings from both parents and teachers also facilitates the evaluation of similarities and contrasts in the nature and severity of symptoms across home and school contexts. However, these informants may differ in their interpretations of observed behaviors, raising questions about the validity of comparing parents' and teachers' ratings.

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