The document summarizes research on factors influencing higher rates of male violence compared to female violence. It finds that differences first emerge in early childhood development, where boys are more susceptible to deficits in caregiving and stress. Specifically, it identifies that slower development in boys, biological differences like testosterone exposure and genes, and growing social inequalities like single parenthood that impact boys more strongly all contribute to higher rates of male violence starting from a young age.
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The document summarizes research on factors influencing higher rates of male violence compared to female violence. It finds that differences first emerge in early childhood development, where boys are more susceptible to deficits in caregiving and stress. Specifically, it identifies that slower development in boys, biological differences like testosterone exposure and genes, and growing social inequalities like single parenthood that impact boys more strongly all contribute to higher rates of male violence starting from a young age.
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CURRENT UPDATES ON
CHILD DEVELOPOMENT
Language development in infancy is influenced differently
by well-educated mothers and fathers, even though they read to their young toddlers (1 to 2 years old) in broadly similar ways.
Well-educated mothers and fathers influence language
development in their young toddlers (1 to 2 years old) differently, even though they read to the children in broadly similar ways. Austrian researchers who study language development in infancy worked with 100 mother-father-child families, separately observing how the mother and father read the same book to their toddlers. They identified and measured five modes of parental behaviour during a 5½ minute parent-child interactive session with a farm animal picture book: Describing-Commenting For example, the parent says, “There are bugs all over the grass” or “The rabbit hops down the path.” Pointing-Labelling For example, the parent says, “Look, these are pigs!” or “A butterfly!” For example, the parent says, “Is this a cat?” or “What does the pig say?” Expanding-Elaborating For example, the parent says, “Yes, a pear. You just ate a pear 20 minutes ago” or “I think this bowl looks like grandma’s bowl.” Repeating-Imitating The parent repeats what the child says. The first difference the researchers found involved a link that was found for fathers but not for mothers between more “repeating/imitating” and the child’s subsequent ability to express words. Why this difference in language development occurs needs further exploration. But the researchers postulate that fathers may tend to interact more playfully with their children, aiming to evoke a reply by repeating and imitating, whilst mothers tend to use repeating and imitating indirectly to correct the child’s utterances, in ways that do not require a verbal response from the child. Conversely, when mothers do more “inquiring/clarifying”, children show enhanced language development. But when fathers do the same thing, their children are likely to show less ability to comprehend. The researchers postulate that mothers may be more likely to follow their children’s lead rather than challenge their limits, resulting in more improvement in the children’s comprehension. When mothers do more “pointing/labelling”, children’s language development proceeds more strongly, but there is no such link for fathers. The researchers postulate that fathers may tend to do this activity more quickly—perhaps too quickly for the children properly to comprehend what is being pointed out or labelled. The researchers also looked at factors that influenced how the mothers and fathers communicated with their toddlers during the reading activity. They measured the parent-child attachment security for each parent-child pair as well as the educational status of each parent. Again, they found significant differences between mothers and fathers. The father’s education influences children’s language development in a way that mother’s education does not, suggesting a social influence on fathers’ parenting that is different from mothers’. If a father has college/university education: His toddler is more likely to show more advanced language comprehension. His child is more likely to display stronger attachment security with him. His own mode of communicating is likely to be more proactive – more pointing/labelling and more describing/commenting. (It should be noted that for both parents, higher education is linked to a greater quantity of reading with the child.) Mothers’ education does not influence their interaction with their children in these ways. For mothers, the interaction seems to be driven more by the attachment relationship with their children. The quality of mother-toddler attachment is associated with more expanding/elaborating, pointing/labelling and inquiring/clarifying on the mothers’ part. This does not hold for fathers. Mothers and fathers are similar, however, in that stronger attachment is linked to a greater extent of reading with a child and stronger development of language comprehension. This is one of the first studies that has attempted to disentangle the influences of mothers and fathers on language development in infancy and to measure fathers’ influence separately from mothers’. Asked by the Child & Family Blog about the practical implications of their study for infant language development, the researchers suggested that parents should see one-to-one reading with a young child more as a relationship experience than a teaching one. It’s important to respond to children’s contributions during reading by picking up their ideas and either reacting in a playful way to evoke a verbal response or more gently to build comprehension. Header photo: Hogan. Creative Commons.
References
Teufl L, Deichmann F, Supper B & Ahnert L (2019), How
fathers’ attachment security and education contribute to early child language skills above and beyond mothers: parent-child conversation under scrutiny, Attachment and Human Development Male violence exceeds female violence by a very significant margin. The origins of this lie in early childhood development, with the first differences appearing in preschool.
Two researchers in the USA, Paul Golding and Hiram E
Fitzgerald, have identified three areas that influence male violence during early childhood development: (1) early relationships with caregivers, (2) biological differences between boys and girls, and (3) growing economic and social inequalities among families in the USA, particularly the growing number of single-parent families. Male violence exceeds female violence by a large margin. Starting in preschool, boys in the USA are more likely to be disciplined and suspended for behavior problems. By adolescence, boys are four times more likely than girls to be arrested for violent crime. In adulthood, male violent crime is four times more common than female violent crime. And men are seven times more likely to commit serious violent crimes, such as murder, rape and robbery. Among major ethnic groups in the USA, only Asian Americans display little difference between male violence and female violence.
Early caregiving and the emergence of male violence
Research has shown that certain deficits in early caregiving are
linked to worse outcomes for boys than for girls. For example, sons of depressed mothers score lower than daughters on measures of attachment at 18 months of age. Similarly, sons who experience maternal insensitivity are more likely to display poorer executive function and more behavioral problems in primary school than girls who experience the same deficit at home. Similar differences appear in measures of fathers’ sensitivity. For example, when fathers fail to exercise dominance during rough-and-tumble play (that is, establishing limits so that the child feels safe), boys are more likely than girls to show aggression and poor control of emotions five years later. But the question remains: Why are boys more affected by these caregiving deficits than girls are? The authors propose that the slower maturation of boys during infancy expands the scope for stress in the social environment to have a negative impact on their development. Girls are protected to an extent by their more rapid development in early childhood
Biological and neurobiological factors
In addition to slower development, other biological differences
between boys and girls could be linked to differences in the development of male and female violence. Boys are more likely to have lower resting heart rates than girls, on average. Lower resting heart rates in children are associated with uncomfortable mood states, seeking stimulation, and antisocial behavior. Boys are more likely to have the MAOA-L gene. This gene, when combined with abusive or neglectful caregiving in early childhood, is associated with impulsive physical aggression later in life. Boys are exposed to higher levels of testosterone in the prenatal and perinatal periods of development and also starting in adolescence. Children’s exposure to testosterone is associated with less empathy and more aggression. Differences in the neurobiology of boys and girls at birth are now being studied to see whether they may point to differential vulnerability to problems in early childhood development.
Social and cultural environment
Golding and Fitzgerald consider the expanding social, economic
and racial inequalities in the USA to be a critical factor in increasing the risk of male violence. The rise of single motherhood (4% of births in the 1950s, 35% 60 years later) is one factor. Single parenthood is associated with a wide range of pressures, for example, fewer economic resources, exposure to discrimination, more likelihood of exposure to conflict, and more mental health problems. All these incur risks for a mother’s ability to care for her children, to which, as described above, boys are more susceptible. The absence of fathers in children’s lives is linked to developmental problems in both boys and girls, but the nature of the problems are different: boys are more likely to show behavior and social problems (externalizing), while girls are more likely to show anxiety and depressive problems (internalizing). This differential response manifests as more aggression among boys. Studies have shown that growing up in poor, single-parent families has differential impacts on boys and girls . Boys from such families are less likely to be employed in their 20s than are girls from the same families. Boys from these families are more likely than girls to exhibit antisocial behavior such as low self- control and delinquency. In the coming months, the Child & Family Blog will run a series of research updates that expand on the emergence of male violence, based on a collection of research articles published this year in the Infant Mental Health Journal. Header photo: Matt Madd. Creative Commons. References
Golding P & Fitzgerald HE (2019), The early biopsychosocial
development of boys and the origins of violence in males, Infant Mental Health Journal 40 Golding P & Fitzgerald HE (2017), Psychology of boys at risk: Indicators from 0-5, Infant Mental Health Journal 38.1 The key predictor of antisocial behavior and violent crime (as opposed to nonviolent crime) is poor emotion regulation in early childhood.
A very small group of boys grow up to become involved in
persistent antisocial behavior and violent offending. Research has confirmed that there are reliable predictors of antisocial behavior in boys as early as the age of two or three. A key predictor of violent crime (as opposed to nonviolent crime) is poor emotion regulation in early childhood. Where this is linked to persistent conduct problems through childhood, particularly when combined with hyperactivity/attention problems, there is a correlation with male violence and antisocial behavior in adolescence and early adulthood. The problem mainly relates to boys. Research has suggested that the male brain is more vulnerable to adverse influences in early childhood. See Male violence: Early childhood development predictors. The research suggests that violence prevention programs should prioritise the development of self-regulation skills in boys living in urban poverty, through working directly with them and through parenting programs. Some programs have already been successful in this regard. The High-Scope Perry Preschool Study reduced early violent antisocial behavior by targeting self- regulation skills in early childhood. Other programs, such as the Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS) curriculum and Family Check-Up, have improved children’s emotion regulation and reduced conduct problems. Positive parenting is often associated with the improvement in child conduct in these programs. Stephanie Sitnick and colleagues have carried out research into early childhood precursors of male violence and antisocial behavior in young adulthood. They studied data from the Pitt Mother & Child Project, a study that followed low-income high- risk youth from the age of one until they were 20 years old; 310 families participated at the start, and 256 were still going at the end. The researchers measured child oppositional behavior, child emotion regulation and quality of the home environment. They also measured conduct problems throughout the period (physical aggression, oppositional behavior, temper tantrums) and hyperactivity/impulsivity/low attention. At 20 years, they measured violence and antisocial behavior both through court records and by interviewing the young adults. Their key finding was the link between poor early emotion regulation and adult antisocial behavior and violence. A considerable amount of other research has linked early childhood development problems with later male violence and antisocial behavior, particularly impulsive, reactive crimes. Correlates include: impairments in early executive function poorer recognition of facial emotions linked to antisocial behavior poor early attachment and rejecting parenting oppositional behavior in early childhood poor self-control, particularly for those living in poverty. Other factors linked to violence and antisocial behavior, reviewed by Adrian Raine, include the following. Genetics: Studies of aggression in identical versus nonidentical twins show 65% heritability for aggression. Heritability for domestic violence is over 50%. Heritability relates more to impulsive/reactive violence. The genetics are complex and the only single gene found to occur more in violent offenders is MAOA (Monoamine Oxidase-A). Brain impairments: Neurological impairments can be seen in several parts of violent offenders’ brains relating to emotion regulation, moral decision-making and impulse control. In particular, reduced structure and reduced glucose metabolism is often observed in the prefrontal cortex. The striatum is also more likely to be enlarged. The striatum is associated with the reward system and may suggest an oversensitivity to rewards in violent offenders. Physical influences: The research suggests a variety of physical predictors of antisocial behavior and violence. Poor prenatal nutrition is associated with increased risk of antisocial personality disorder in adulthood. Child malnutrition is linked to aggression in childhood. One fatty acid critical for brain development, omega-3, is not produced by the body but is present in some foods, such as fish—and countries with diets high in fish have lower murder rates. Maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy is linked to persistent offending. These links are stronger when other sources of stress exist, such as single-parent family status or an unwanted pregnancy. Alcohol consumption during pregnancy has been shown in many studies to be a risk factor for adult antisocial behavior and violence. Paternal alcohol consumption is also linked, possibly through epigenetic inheritance. Some birth complications, such as hypoxia, are linked to adult impulsive violent Lead exposure has been linked to adult antisocial behavior and violence. Lead is neurotoxic and affects boys more than girls, another indication of boys’ increased vulnerability to adverse influences in early childhood. Some traumatic brain injuries are linked to later violent behaviors. Header photo: Ceci. Creative Commons.
References
Sitnick SL, Galán CA & Shaw DS (2019), Early childhood
predictors of boys’ antisocial and violent behavior in early adulthood, Infant Mental Health Journal 40 Raine A (2019), A neurodevelopmental perspective on male violence, Infant Mental Health Journal 40 LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT IN INFANCY
Infants tend to pay more attention and respond
more eagerly to baby talk than to normal adult conversation. The playfully exaggerated and high- pitched tone your voice takes lights up your little one's mind.
Eighty percent of her brain’s physical development happens
during her first 3 years. As her brain gets bigger, it also forms the connections it needs to think, learn, and process information. These connections, called synapses, form at a super-fast rate, about 700 per second in the first few years.
Speaking to your baby fires up those important synapses in the
part of her brain that handles language. The more words she hears, the stronger those mental connections get. That process can strengthen your child’s future language skills and her overall ability to learn.
Infants who get more baby talk know more words by age 2 than their peers. The origins of lie in early childhood development
Whether we choose to admit it or not, lying is a part of life
(would I lie to you?). From casual "white lies" to more complicated scams and major deceptions, lying seems to be at the root of a bewildering number of political and economic scandals. The question of whether someone is telling the truth seems to comes up time and again in many of our social interactions as adults and recognizing lies becomes a major challenge.
But how early do we learn to lie? And what purpose does
it serve in young children? While measuring lying behaviour in young children through laboratory experiments has its own limitations, previous study results suggest that lying behaviour can be seen in children as young as forty-two months. Anecdotal evidence provided by parents and caregivers suggests that lying behaviour can been seen in children who are even younger although it is somewhat different from the lies we tell as we grow older.
According to a developmental model of lying first proposed
by Victoria Talwar and Kang Lee, children around the age of two to three years begin by telling primary lies which are designed to conceal transgressions but fail to take the mental state of the listener into consideration. Around the age of four, children learn to tell secondary lies which are more plausible and geared to the listener's mental development. By age seven or eight, children learn to tell tertiary lies which are more consistent with known facts and follow-up statements.
Since the executive functioning skills needed for lying are
already in place for chldren as young as two, it is probably not surprising that parents have reported seeing their own children attempt lying behaviour at that age. In 1877, Charles Darwin suggested that children as young as thirty months are capable of lying after seeing his young son trying to deceive him. More recently, a team of British psychologists used a natural observation method to spot 37 examples of lying behaviour in a 30-month-old child. Child researchers at the University of Waterloo reported that 65 percent of two-year-olds and 94 percent of four-year-olds lied at least once.
While naturalistic observation by researchers is more
impartial than the anecdotal evidence provided by even eminent scientists like Darwin, there are still problems involved in ruling out other possible explanations for what the researchers are seeing. Laboratory studies suggest that children are capable of deceiving people (such as learning to hide toys) but it is debatable whether spontaneous lying can be effectively studied under laboratory conditions.
There appears to be a link between a child's cognitive
abilities and their ability to lie successfully. Along with executive functioning, children need to be capable of inhibitory control, i.e., the ability to suppress a response while completing a separate goal. A good working memory is also needed since children need to be capable of retaining details about the lie and the truth. Research looking at lying in young children suggests that inhibitory control is especially important since children with poor control are not effective liars while working memory may not be as useful.
A new study published in Developmental
Psychology examined lying in two and three-year-old children and some of the cognitive skills involved with deception. Conducted by Angela Evans of Brock University and Kang Lee of the University of Toronto, the study used a series of executive functioning and verbal tasks as well as two deception tasks to measure lying behaviour. The first deception task involved children being invited to play a guessing game in which a toy was placed behind them and they were asked to guess they toy from a characteristic sound (such as quacking if it was a toy duck). After children successfully guessed two toys, the experimenter pretended to get a storybook and the children were asked not to peek at a toy that had been placed behind . The development on key predictor of antisocial behavior and violent crime
Research on early childhood predictors of
violent behaviors in early adulthood is limited. The current study investigated whether individual, family, and community risk factors from 18 to 42 months of age were predictive of violent criminal arrests during late adolescence and early adulthood using a sample of 310 low‐income male participants living in an urban community. In addition, differences in trajectories of overt conduct problems (CP), hyperactivity/attention problems (HAP), and co‐occurring patterns of CP and HAP from age 1½ to 10 years were investigated in regard to their relationship to violent and nonviolent behaviors, depression, and anxiety at age 20. Results of multivariate analyses indicated that early childhood family income, home environment, emotion regulation, oppositional behavior, and minority status were all significant in distinguishing violent offending boys from those with no criminal records. In addition, trajectories of early childhood CP, but not attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, were significantly related to self‐reports of violent behavior, depressive symptoms, and anxiety symptoms. Implications for the prevention of early childhood risk factors associated with adolescent and adult violent behavior for males are discussed.
Previous work with the current sample (Sitnick
et al., 2017) identified multiple proximal and distal risk factors associated with adolescents’ engagement in violent crime. However, it is unclear if the same risk factors continue to be influential during early adulthood when perpetrators are no longer considered minors within the legal system. Thus, the current study aims to determine if previously established early childhood predictors of adolescent violent behavior extend to violent criminal behavior in early adulthood. In addition, others have identified childhood conduct problems (CP) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) as risk factors for increased antisocial behavior (AB), and in some cases, violent behavior during adolescence (Moffitt, 1990; Shaw, Lacourse, & Nagin, 2005). As children are often not diagnosed with ADHD until school age, the current study will investigate symptoms of ADHD in the form of hyperactivity/attention problems (HAP). Specifically, the current study investigates whether early‐starting trajectories of CP and HAP are predictive of violent behaviors and other indicators of maladjustment in early adulthood. REFLECTION
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