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 language | American English |
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Journal | Development and Psychopathology |
Volume | 14 |
State | Published - 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