# Less Positive Parenting Appears to be a Consequence, Rather Than a Cause, of Youth Antisocial Behavior: Results from a Longitudinal Twin Study

**Authors:** Alaina M. Di Dio, Elizabeth A. Shewark, Luke W. Hyde, S. Alexandra Burt

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10802-026-01425-2 · 2026-02-14

## TL;DR

This study finds that youth antisocial behavior leads to less positive parenting in adolescence, not the other way around.

## Contribution

The study uses a twin differences design to show that early antisocial behavior evokes less positive parenting later.

## Key findings

- Childhood antisocial behavior predicts reduced positive parenting in adolescence.
- DZ twin differences in childhood antisocial behavior predict differences in adolescent positive parenting.
- Genetic influences on antisocial behavior appear to mediate changes in parenting.

## Abstract

Although positive parenting in childhood consistently predicts less adolescent antisocial behavior (ASB) over time, the etiology and direction of their association remain unclear. To fill this gap, we sought to illuminate prospective associations and potential changes in the etiology of the relationship between maternal positive parenting and youth ASB from middle childhood to adolescence using a cross-lagged, twin differences design. Participants were drawn from a longitudinal study with planned missingness (1,422 twins ages 6–11 at Wave 1 and 852 twins ages 11–19 at Wave 2) within the Michigan State University Twin Registry. Phenotypic analyses indicated that more childhood ASB significantly predicted less positive parenting in adolescence, but not the reverse. Twin difference-score analyses similarly revealed that, within both monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs, co-twin differences in the positive parenting received in middle childhood did not significantly predict differences in adolescent ASB. However, DZ (but not MZ) co-twin differences in childhood ASB significantly predicted differences in positive parenting during adolescence, whereby the DZ co-twin exhibiting more ASB in childhood received less positive parenting in adolescence. These results collectively suggest a child-driven, genetically mediated effect of early ASB on later positive parenting, such that genetic influences on ASB in middle childhood appear to evoke reductions in positive parenting during adolescence. Moreover, because effect sizes did not differ across zygosity, results also suggest that shared familial/environmental confounds at least partially underlie the association. These findings have important implications for interventions and etiologic models of youth ASB across development.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10802-026-01425-2.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ASB (MESH:D000987)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12906592/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12906592