L
L. Rowell Huesmann
Researcher at University of Michigan
Publications - 163
Citations - 17120
L. Rowell Huesmann is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aggression & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 161 publications receiving 16250 citations. Previous affiliations of L. Rowell Huesmann include Iowa State University & Yale University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Serious violent behavior and antisocial outcomes as consequences of exposure to ethnic-political conflict and violence among Israeli and Palestinian youth.
Eric F. Dubow,L. Rowell Huesmann,Paul Boxer,Cathy Smith,Simha F. Landau,Shira Dvir Gvirsman,Khalil Shikaki +6 more
TL;DR: Bivariate regression models indicated that both early cumulative exposure to ethnic-political violence during childhood and adolescence and concurrent exposure during late adolescence/early adulthood predicted all six serious violent and antisocial outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Longitudinal predictions of young adults' weapons use and criminal behavior from their childhood exposure to violence.
L. Rowell Huesmann,Eric F. Dubow,Eric F. Dubow,Paul Boxer,Brad J. Bushman,Cathy Smith,Meagan A Docherty,Meagan A Docherty,Maureen O'Brien +8 more
TL;DR: This article found that early exposure to violence with weapons significantly correlates with the propensity to use or threaten to use a firearm later in life, as well as criminal violent acts 10 years later.
Journal ArticleDOI
Probe similarity and recognition of set membership: A parallel processing serial feature matching model
TL;DR: A model for memory scanning is proposed in which the encoded representation of a probe is compared in parallel with encoded representations of each item in the positive set, showing predictions consonant with existing data on the relation between reaction times and set size and speed-accuracy trade offs.
Book ChapterDOI
An Integrative Theoretical Understanding of Aggression
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors lay out the most important key principles for understanding the occurrence of aggressive behavior and draw on key findings from social, cognitive, and developmental psychology to understand aggression.