# Commentary: An impressive state‐of‐the‐science account and an exciting springboard for new paths: the present and future of research on early conduct problems – a commentary on Hyde et al. (2025)

**Authors:** Grazyna Kochanska

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.70123 · 2026-01-25

## TL;DR

This commentary highlights a comprehensive review of early conduct problems and suggests new research directions focusing on early relational experiences and positive socialization.

## Contribution

The paper proposes expanding research to include very early relational experiences and positive socialization forces as buffers against antisocial behavior.

## Key findings

- The review is comprehensive and up-to-date on developmental science related to conduct problems.
- The commentary suggests new directions for research on early relational experiences and positive socialization.
- It emphasizes the heuristic value of the review in inspiring new questions and interdisciplinary connections.

## Abstract

In this commentary on ‘Annual Research Review: Early conduct problems – precursors, outcomes, and etiology’ by Hyde and colleagues, I discuss the strengths of that review and its heuristic value in inspiring future research directions. The review is an impressive, comprehensive, scholarly, and up‐to‐date broad summary of the current state of developmental science related to conduct problems. By embracing biopsychosocial/ecological perspective and reviewing constructs and processes across multiple levels, it has a cutting‐edge quality and scope. But perhaps even more importantly, it is heuristically fertile: It inspires new compelling questions and can potentially forge new bridges with other perspectives and areas of research. I discuss two such new directions that can complement – without contradicting – the authors' ideas. One, I argue for expanding the focus to relational experiences and parents' and children's emerging representations in the first years of life to elucidate very early origins of maladaptive cascades leading to conduct problems. And two, I suggest complementing the current emphasis on adverse developmental factors – a natural focus in the study of conduct problems – with research on positive socialization forces that can act as powerful buffers against risks for antisocial behavior.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** antisocial behavior (MESH:D000987), conduct problems (MESH:D019973)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13036388