Response decision processes and externalizing behavior problems in adolescents

R. G. Fontaine, Virginia Burks Salzer, K. A. Dodge

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Externalizing behavior problems of 124 adolescents were assessed across Grades 7-11. In Grade 9, participants were also assessed across social-cognitive domains after imagining themselves as the object of provocations portrayed in six videotaped vignettes. Participants responded to vignette-based questions representing multiple processes of the response decision step of social information processing. Phase 1 of our investigation supported a two-factor model of the response evaluation process of response decision (response valuation and outcome expectancy). Phase 2 showed significant relations between the set of these response decision processes, as well as response selection, measured in Grade 9 and (a) externalizing behavior in Grade 9 and (b) externalizing behavior in Grades 10-11, even after controlling externalizing behavior in Grades 7-8. These findings suggest that on-line behavioral judgments about aggression play a crucial role in the maintenance and growth of aggressive response tendencies in adolescence. Copyright © 2002 Cambridge University Press.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalDevelopment and Psychopathology
Volume14
StatePublished - Jan 1 2002

Keywords

  • Child Behavior Disorders
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Humans
  • Individuation
  • Internal-External Control
  • Parent-Child Relations
  • Personality Assessment
  • Social Adjustment
  • Sociometric Techniques
  • adolescent
  • adult
  • aggression
  • article
  • behavior disorder
  • child behavior
  • child parent relation
  • cognition
  • control
  • decision making
  • female
  • follow up
  • hostility
  • human
  • imagination
  • individualization
  • major clinical study
  • male
  • outcome assessment
  • peer group
  • personality test
  • priority journal
  • provocation
  • psychological aspect
  • questionnaire
  • social adaptation
  • social aspect
  • sociometric status
  • theoretical model
  • victim
  • videotape
  • vignette

Disciplines

  • Psychology

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