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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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Explicit- and Implicit Bullying Attitudes in Relation to Bullying Behavior

TL;DR: A significant interaction between implicit and explicit bullying attitudes indicated that in children with relatively positive explicit attitudes, implicit bullying attitudes were important predictors of bullying behavior.
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Predicting Change in Children’s Aggression and Victimization Using Classroom-level Descriptive Norms of Aggression and Pro-social Behavior

TL;DR: Results indicated that students in classrooms with higher initial mean levels of aggression reported larger increases in aggression and victimization over the school year and pro-social classroom norms were unrelated to change in Aggression and Victimization.
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Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Curriculum‐based Anti‐bullying Intervention Program in Greek Primary Schools

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report the short and long-term effects of an anti-bullying intervention program based on a particular set of curricular activities that aimed to create classroom opportunities for awareness raising, self-reflection, and problem-solving situations relevant to bullying.
MonographDOI

The psychology of social conflict and aggression

TL;DR: In this article, the psychology of social conflict and aggression is discussed and the role of perspective-taking and empathy in resolving social conflict is discussed, and the Doormat Effect: On the Dangers of resolving Conflict via Unilateral Forgiveness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Criminal attitudes to violence: Development and preliminary validation of a scale for male prisoners.

TL;DR: Archer and Haigh as mentioned in this paper developed and preliminary psychometric properties of a new scale measuring criminal attitudes to violence, the Criminal Attitudes to Violence Scale (CAVS), which was designed so that it had a single factor structure and was uncorrelated with a measure of social desirability bias.
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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