Individual Differences Are Accentuated During Periods of Social Change: The Sample Case of Girls at Puberty

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Abstract

The emergence of new behaviors and the reorganization of psychological structures are often attributed to critical events and crises in the life course. A fundamentally different perspective is offered: Potentially disruptive transitions produce personality continuity, not change. The behavioral responses of adolescent girls to the onset of menarche was studied in a longitudinal study of an unselected birth cohort. Predictions from 3 rival hypotheses about the relation between pubertal change and social psychological change were first tested: the stressful change, off time, and early-timing hypotheses. The results supported the early-timing hypothesis. Whether stressful, early menarche generated new behavioral problems or accentuated premenarcheal dispositions was then tested. The results supported an accentuation model: Stressful transitions accentuated behavioral problems among girls who were predisposed to behavioral problems earlier in childhood. Speculations are offered for a broader theory about the role of individual differences in the life course.

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Caspi, A., & Moffitt, T. E. (1991). Individual Differences Are Accentuated During Periods of Social Change: The Sample Case of Girls at Puberty. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 61(1), 157–168. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.61.1.157

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