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Dive into the research topics where Hyoun K. Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by Hyoun K. Kim.


Development and Psychopathology | 2005

Developmental trajectories of offending: Validation and prediction to young adult alcohol use, drug use, and depressive symptoms

Margit Wiesner; Hyoun K. Kim; Deborah M. Capaldi

This longitudinal study extended previous work of Wiesner and Capaldi by examining the validity of differing offending pathways and the prediction from the pathways to substance use and depressive symptoms for 204 young men. Findings from this study indicated good external validity of the offending trajectories. Further, substance use and depressive symptoms in young adulthood (i.e., ages 23-24 through 25-26 years) varied depending on different trajectories of offending from early adolescence to young adulthood (i.e., ages 12-13 through 23-24 years), even after controlling for antisocial propensity, parental criminality, demographic factors, and prior levels of each outcome. Specifically, chronic high-level offenders had higher levels of depressive symptoms and engaged more often in drug use compared with very rare, decreasing low-level, and decreasing high-level offenders. Chronic low-level offenders, in contrast, displayed fewer systematic differences compared with the two decreasing offender groups and the chronic high-level offenders. The findings supported the contention that varying courses of offending may have plausible causal effects on young adult outcomes beyond the effects of an underlying propensity for crime.


Developmental Psychology | 2006

Co-occurring delinquency and depressive symptoms of adolescent boys and girls: A dual trajectory modeling approach.

Margit Wiesner; Hyoun K. Kim

Co-occurring trajectories of delinquent behavior and depressive symptoms and their correlates were examined in a longitudinal sample of 985 middle-adolescent boys and girls (mean age = 15.54 years at Time 1). Dual trajectory analysis was used to identify the co-occurring trajectories. For boys (n = 472), 4 delinquency and 4 depression trajectory groups were found. For girls (n = 513), 3 delinquency and 3 depression trajectory groups were identified. The linkage between co-occurring trajectories was higher for girls than for boys. Stressful life events and childhood precursors of the outcomes predicted trajectory group membership for both genders fairly consistently. Findings suggest heterogeneity in developmental courses of delinquent behavior and depressive symptoms across adolescent boys and girls.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2012

General Versus Specific Predictors of Male Arrest Trajectories: A Test of the Moffitt and Patterson Theories

Margit Wiesner; Deborah M. Capaldi; Hyoun K. Kim

Developmental taxonomies of crime disagree on whether distinctive offender trajectories are related to common or unique risks. This study examined childhood risks of differing arrest trajectories across childhood through early adulthood (from ages 10–11 to 26–27xa0years) that were identified in prior work for 203 at-risk, predominantly Caucasian young men. Multivariate analyses revealed that when both distal (childhood risk factors) and proximal risk factors (deviant peer association as a time-varying covariate) were included in the model, relatively few childhood risk factors (assessed at age 9–10xa0years) discriminated the chronic offender groups from rare offenders (i.e., child antisocial behavior, child attention problems, parents’ antisocial behavior). Rather, deviant peer association was significantly related to levels of offending within each trajectory group (i.e., chronic and rare offender groups). No predictor differentially predicted membership in the two chronic groups, supporting the linear gradation argument. Theoretical and prevention implications are discussed.


American Journal of Primatology | 2015

The development of an instrument to measure global dimensions of maternal care in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)

Kai M. McCormack; Brittany R. Howell; Dora B. Guzman; C. Villongco; Katherine C. Pears; Hyoun K. Kim; Megan R. Gunnar; Mar M. Sanchez

One of the strongest predictors of healthy child development is the quality of maternal care. Although many measures of observation and self‐report exist in humans to assess global aspects of maternal care, such qualitative measures are lacking in nonhuman primates. In this study, we developed an instrument to measure global aspects of maternal care in rhesus monkeys, with the goal of complementing the individual behavioral data collected using a well‐established rhesus macaque ethogram during the first months postpartum. The 22 items of the instrument were adapted from human maternal sensitivity assessments and a maternal Q‐sort instrument already published for macaques. The 22 items formed four dimensions with high levels of internal reliability that represented major constructs of maternal care: (1) Sensitivity/Responsivity, (2) Protectiveness, (3) Permissiveness, and (4) Irritability. These dimensions yielded high construct validity when correlated with mother–infant frequency and duration behavior that was collected from focal observations across the first 3 postnatal months. In addition, comparisons of two groups of mothers (Maltreating vs. Competent mothers) showed significant differences across the dimensions suggesting that this instrument has strong concurrent validity, even after controlling for focal observation variables that have been previously shown to significantly differentiate these groups. Our findings suggest that this Instrument of Macaque Maternal Care has the potential to capture global aspects of the mother–infant relationship that complement individual behaviors collected through focal observations. Am. J. Primatol. 77:20–33, 2015.


Criminology | 2008

ARREST TRAJECTORIES ACROSS A 17‐YEAR SPAN FOR YOUNG MEN: RELATION TO DUAL TAXONOMIES AND SELF‐REPORTED OFFENSE TRAJECTORIES

Margit Wiesner; Deborah M. Capaldi; Hyoun K. Kim


Archive | 2004

Women's Involvement in Aggression in Young Adult Romantic Relationships: A Developmental Systems Model.

Deborah M. Capaldi; Hyoun K. Kim; Joann Wu Shortt


Archive | 2009

The association between partner violence and child maltreatment: A common conceptual framework.

Deborah M. Capaldi; Hyoun K. Kim; Katherine C. Pears


Journal of Vocational Behavior | 2010

Arrests, Recent Life Circumstances, and Recurrent Job Loss for At-Risk Young Men: An Event-History Analysis

Margit Wiesner; Deborah M. Capaldi; Hyoun K. Kim


Archive | 2014

Comorbidity of Depression and Conduct Disorder

Deborah M. Capaldi; Hyoun K. Kim


Western criminology review | 2011

Early Adult Outcomes of Male Arrest Trajectories: Propensity versus Causation Effects.

Margit Wiesner; Deborah M. Capaldi; Hyoun K. Kim

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Joann Wu Shortt

Oregon Research Institute

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C. Villongco

Yerkes National Primate Research Center

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Dora B. Guzman

Yerkes National Primate Research Center

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Kai M. McCormack

Yerkes National Primate Research Center

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