4.3 Article

Heterogeneity in caregiving-related early adversity: Creating stable dimensions and subtypes

期刊

DEVELOPMENT AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
卷 34, 期 2, 页码 621-634

出版社

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0954579421001668

关键词

caregiving related early adversities; heterogeneity; prediction; subtyping

资金

  1. National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health [5RO1MH091864]
  2. NIMH [R21MH118556-01]
  3. Brain and Behavior Research foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This paper investigates caregiving-related early adversities (crEAs) using network science and data reduction techniques. The results show that the cooccurrence of crEA dimensions/subtypes is stable and more consistent than traditional sociolegally defined groups, with reduced correlations to sociodemographic factors. Moreover, these data-driven dimensions/subtypes have unique and common predictive importance for childhood mental health symptoms and academic skills.
Early psychosocial adversities exist at many levels, including caregiving-related, extrafamilial, and sociodemographic, which despite their high interrelatedness may have unique impacts on development. In this paper, we focus on caregiving-related early adversities (crEAs) and parse the heterogeneity of crEAs via data reduction techniques that identify experiential cooccurrences. Using network science, we characterized crEA cooccurrences to represent the comorbidity of crEA experiences across a sample of school-age children (n = 258; 6-12 years old) with a history of crEAs. crEA dimensions (variable level) and crEA subtypes (subject level) were identified using parallel factor analysis/principal component analysis and graph-based Louvain community detection. Bagging enhancement with cross-validation provided estimates of robustness. These data-driven dimensions/subtypes showed evidence of stability, transcended traditional sociolegally defined groups, were more homogenous than sociolegally defined groups, and reduced statistical correlations with sociodemographic factors. Finally, random forests showed both unique and common predictive importance of the crEA dimensions/subtypes for childhood mental health symptoms and academic skills. These data-driven outcomes provide additional tools and recommendations for crEA data reduction to inform precision medicine efforts in this area.

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