Children's normative beliefs about aggression and aggressive behavior
TLDR
The authors found that children tended to approve more of aggression as they grew older and that this increase appeared to be correlated with increases in aggressive behavior.Abstract:
Normative beliefs have been defined as self-regulating beliefs about the appropriateness of social behaviors. In 2 studies the authors revised their scale for assessing normative beliefs about aggression, found that it is reliable and valid for use with elementary school children, and investigated the longitudinal relation between normative beliefs about aggression and aggressive behavior in a large sample of elementary school children living in poor urban neighborhoods. Using data obtained in 2 waves of observations 1 year apart, the authors found that children tended to approve more of aggression as they grew older and that this increase appeared to be correlated with increases in aggressive behavior. More important, although individual differences in aggressive behavior predicted subsequent differences in normative beliefs in younger children, individual differences in aggressive behavior were predicted by preceding differences in normative beliefs in older children.read more
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
Social environment risk factors for violence, family context, and trajectories of social-emotional functioning among Latinx adolescents.
Marie C D Stoner,Erica N Browne,Marissa Raymond-Flesch,Linda McGlone,Antonio A. Morgan-Lopez,Alexandra Minnis +5 more
TL;DR: This paper used trajectory models to explore longitudinal patterns of emotion regulation and nonviolent problem-solving and multinomial regression to distinguish how these groups were associated with family context, partner and peer gang involvement, and neighborhood social disorder.
Book ChapterDOI
Imitation and Social Robotics
Yasser Mohammad,Toyoaki Nishida +1 more
TL;DR: This study highlights the importance of knowing how to imitate others when you want to learn new skills and unconsciously imitate them during interaction.
OtherDOI
Aggression in Early and Middle Childhood
TL;DR: The most empirically robust sex difference between males and females is that males are more physically aggressive than females across the life course and across diverse cultures as discussed by the authors , indicating that the genetic vulnerability for physical and social aggression has significant social consequences.
References
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Book
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Journal ArticleDOI
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Nicki R. Crick,Kenneth A. Dodge +1 more
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Journal ArticleDOI
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Journal Article
Controlled and Automatic Human Information Processing: 1. Detection, Search, and Attention.
TL;DR: A series of studies using both reaction time and accuracy measures is presented, which traces these concepts in the form of automatic detection and controlled, search through the areas of detection, search, and attention and resolves a number of apparent conflicts in the literature.
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