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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.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Community violence exposure, social cognition, and aggression among urban elementary school children

TL;DR: It is suggested that witnessing community violence has an effect on children's aggressive behavior through both imitation of violence and the development of associated cognitions as children get older.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cyberbullying in adolescents: Modalities and aggressors' profile

TL;DR: Cyberbullying was significantly associated with the use of proactive aggression, justification of violence, exposure to violence, and less perceived social support of friends.
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Short-term and Long-term Effects of Violent Media on Aggression in Children and Adults

TL;DR: The results showed that there were overall modest but significant effect sizes for exposure to media violence on aggressive behaviors, aggressive thoughts, angry feelings, arousal levels, and helping behavior, consistent with the theory that short-term effects are mostly due to the priming of existing well-encoded scripts, schemas, or beliefs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Children's Social Competence in Cultural Context

TL;DR: Research on children's social functioning and peer relationships in different cultures from an integrative contextual-developmental perspective and the implications of the macro-level social and cultural changes that are happening in many societies for socialization and development of social competence are reviewed.
References
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Book

Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A Social Cognitive Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, models of Human Nature and Casualty are used to model human nature and human health, and a set of self-regulatory mechanisms are proposed. But they do not consider the role of cognitive regulators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adolescence-limited and life-course-persistent antisocial behavior: A developmental taxonomy.

TL;DR: It is suggested that delinquency conceals 2 distinct categories of individuals, each with a unique natural history and etiology: a small group engages in antisocial behavior of 1 sort or another at every life stage, whereas a larger group is antisocial only during adolescence.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review and reformulation of social information-processing mechanisms in children's social adjustment.

TL;DR: In this article, the relation between social information processing and social adjustment in childhood is reviewed and interpreted within the framework of a reformulated model of human performance and social exchange, which proves to assimilate almost all previous studies and is a useful heuristic device for organizing the field.
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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