High resting heart rate protects against the intergenerational transmission of antisocial behavior: a birth cohort study

This study examines whether high resting heart rate may be one such factor. Resting heart rate was measured in 405 children of parents from a birth cohort, together with antisocial behavior in both the parent and the child. Children who were not antisocial, but had a parent high on antisocial behavior, had higher resting heart rates than all three other parent –child antisocial behavior groupings. Results withstood control for age, gender, ethnicity, body mass index, and psychosocial adversity. Robustness checks confirmed these results. Findings are the first to identify a biological protective factor against the intergenerational transmission of childh ood antisocial behavior.
Source: European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry - Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research