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Antisocial by Bradley Campbell5/27/2023 ![]() ![]() Results of a moderation analysis revealed that RF moderated the relationship between infant negative affect and toddler behavior problems, such that when parental RF was high there was a nonsignificant relationship between infant negative affect and toddler behavior problems. However, infant negative affect correlated positively with toddler behavior problems and both correlated with cumulative sociodemographic risk. Dustin Henry, Dylan Fulford, Mike Campbell, Magnus Hanson, Kevin Lowry, Andrew McGraw, Mike Vince, Will Marshall, Zander Mitchell, Justin David, Jed Anderson. ![]() ![]() One scale on the measure is the Antisocial scale which consists of 24 items and has three subscales tapping Egocentricity, Sensation Seeking, and Antisocial Behavior. Results suggest that parental RF was not associated with infant negative affect or toddler behavior problems. Personality Assessment Inventory-Antisocial Scale (PAI-ANT Morey 2007) The PAI is a multi-scale self-report inventory consisting of 344 items. During a lab visit when their infant was 16 months old, mothers participated in the Parent Development Interview–Revised Short Form, which was coded for R F. They also completed the Child Behavior Checklist over the phone when their infant was 18 months old. Mothers provided self-report demographic data and completed the Infant Behavior Questionnaire–Revised during a home visit when the infant was 7 months old. This study assessed the links between infant negative affect, parental reflective functioning (RF), and toddler behavior problems in a sample of 84 women and their infants. ![]()
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