Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction – Biological factors in crime causation: the reactions of social scientists
- Part I Methodological questions and implications
- Part II Evidence for the role of genetics
- Part III Psychophysiological and neurophysiological factors
- 7 Autonomic nervous system factors in criminal behavior
- 8 Electroencephalogram among criminals
- 9 Childhood diagnostic and neurophysiological predictors of teenage arrest rates: an eight-year prospective study
- Part IV Neurological factors
- Part V Biochemical factors
- Part VI Treatment issues
- Author index
- Subject index
9 - Childhood diagnostic and neurophysiological predictors of teenage arrest rates: an eight-year prospective study
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction – Biological factors in crime causation: the reactions of social scientists
- Part I Methodological questions and implications
- Part II Evidence for the role of genetics
- Part III Psychophysiological and neurophysiological factors
- 7 Autonomic nervous system factors in criminal behavior
- 8 Electroencephalogram among criminals
- 9 Childhood diagnostic and neurophysiological predictors of teenage arrest rates: an eight-year prospective study
- Part IV Neurological factors
- Part V Biochemical factors
- Part VI Treatment issues
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Introduction
Many disorders of early childhood are transient and are not predictive of psychopathology in later life (Kohlberg, La Cross, & Ricks, 1972). This is clearly not the case for the hyperactive child syndrome. The hyperactive child presents a remarkably immutable syndrome that forecasts an ominous picture of the future. The clinical picture often worsens as the child grows older, with resulting adolescent problems of academic failure and serious antisocial behavior.
Although many follow-up studies of hyperactive children have revealed a substantial subgroup (25%) to be delinquent (Huessy, Metoyer, & Townsend, 1974; Mendelson, Johnson, & Stewart, 1971; Weiss, Minde, Werry, Douglas, & Nemeth, 1971), most studies are flawed by one or more of the following weaknesses: inadequate or missing control group; lack of information as to the nature, frequency, and type of offenses committed; absence of official arrest data; and a substantial number of subjects lost to follow-up. It is generally thought that the teenage delinquency rate among former hyperactive children is higher than that among nonhyperactive control children. However, because of the above-mentioned weaknesses, how much higher the delinquency rate is among the hyperactive group is not known. The amount of predictive information the diagnosis of hyperactive child syndrome conveys regarding teenage delinquency is related to the question of how much higher the rate of teenage delinquency is among former hyperactive children than among nonhyperactive control children. In other words, if the diagnosis adds predictive information, children diagnosed as hyperactive should have an outcome substantially different from those who did not fit the diagnosis.
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- Information
- The Causes of CrimeNew Biological Approaches, pp. 146 - 167Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1987
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