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Temperament and Psychopathology: Time-varying associations from infancy to adolescence

Sacks, D. D.; Abron, A.; Vartany, P.; Nelson, C. A.; Bosquet Enlow, M.

2025-10-17 psychiatry and clinical psychology
10.1101/2025.10.15.25338125 medRxiv
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BackgroundTemperament traits, which reflect early emerging individual differences in reactivity and regulation, are well-established correlates of psychopathology. However, studies have historically examined static temperament-psychopathology associations within limited age ranges. Research is required to understand the developmental dynamics of these associations. MethodsWe leveraged data from a longitudinal cohort (N = 767) with repeated measures in infancy and at ages 2 years, 3 years, 5 years, 7 years, and 11 years to examine predictive and concurrent associations between temperament traits (negative affectivity, surgency, effortful control, behavioral inhibition) and psychopathology (internalizing, externalizing) symptoms. We estimated time-varying associations using generalized additive mixed models to quantify variation in the significance and magnitude of associations from infancy through early adolescence. ResultsGreater negative affectivity consistently predicted higher internalizing and externalizing symptoms from infancy through 11 years. Surgency showed differential patterns, with higher surgency associated with lower internalizing symptoms but greater externalizing symptoms. Surgency from 2 years was associated with both internalizing and externalizing symptoms over proximal developmental intervals, whereas at 3 years, associations with externalizing extended distally through 11 years, while associations with internalizing remained proximal. Higher effortful control was associated with fewer internalizing and externalizing symptoms, with stronger effects for externalizing symptoms. Behavioral inhibition at 3 years was associated with internalizing symptoms ages 3 and 5 years. The significance and magnitude of associations between temperament domains and psychopathology symptoms varied based on developmental timing. ConclusionsTemperament traits show differential associations with psychopathology symptoms, depending on the specific temperament trait and psychopathology domain. Further, the significance and magnitude of associations vary based on developmental timing. These findings highlight the importance of considering differential traits, domains, and developmental timing when considering the potential role of temperament in psychopathology.

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