“…Higher p factor scores are associated with early adverse experiences and a family history of psychopathology (Caspi et al, 2014; Deutz et al, 2020; Hyland et al, 2020; Lahey et al, 2012; Martel et al, 2017; Schaefer et al, 2018). Of particular relevance to the current paper, the p factor is also associated with markers of socioeconomic disadvantage, whether they are assessed cross-sectionally (Belsky et al, 2019; Lahey et al, 2012; Patalay et al, 2015), prospectively (Blanco et al, 2021; Caspi et al, 2014; Schäfer et al, 2020), or longitudinally (Snyder, Young, & Hankin, 2019; Wade, Fox, Zeanah, & Nelson, 2018). Furthermore, heightened p factor scores in adolescence are associated with experiences of racial discrimination (Liu, Mustanski, Dick, Bolland, & Kertes, 2017), and higher p scores in adulthood are independently predicted by experiences of childhood and adolescent victimization, after accounting for genetic liabilities and pre-existing symptomatology (Schaefer et al, 2018).…”