نتایج جستجو برای: Physical Aggression

تعداد نتایج: 677740  

2015
K. DANIEL

Seventy-five intact, volunteer couples were assigned to either a gender-specific or a conjoint 14-week group treatment for psychological and physical aggression. Participants from both treatments significantly reduced their psychological and physical aggression, at both posttreatment and t-year follow-up. During treatment, husbands reduced their psychological aggression by 47%, their moderate p...

Journal: :The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine 2013
Dorothy L Espelage Sabina Low Joshua R Polanin Eric C Brown

PURPOSE To evaluate the impact of the Second Step: Student Success Through Prevention (SS-SSTP) Middle School Program on reducing youth violence including peer aggression, peer victimization, homophobic name calling, and sexual violence perpetration and victimization among middle school sixth-grade students. METHODS The study design was a nested cohort (sixth graders) longitudinal study. We r...

Journal: :Child maltreatment 2011
Inna Altschul Shawna J Lee

This study used data from 845 foreign-born (n = 328) and native-U.S. born (n = 517) Hispanic mothers who participated in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS) to examine four indicators of acculturation--nativity, years lived in the United States, religious attendance, and endorsement of traditional gender norms--as predictors of maternal physical aggression directed toward you...

Journal: :Development and psychopathology 2014
Dianna Murray-Close Nicki R Crick Wan-Ling Tseng Nicole Lafko Casey Burrows Clio Pitula Peter Ralston

The purpose of the present investigation was to examine the association between physiological reactivity to peer stressors and physical and relational aggression. Potential moderation by actual experiences of peer maltreatment (i.e., physical and relational victimization) and gender were also explored. One hundred ninety-six children (M = 10.11 years, SD = 0.64) participated in a laboratory str...

Journal: :The Behavioral and brain sciences 2009
John Archer

I argue that the magnitude and nature of sex differences in aggression, their development, causation, and variability, can be better explained by sexual selection than by the alternative biosocial version of social role theory. Thus, sex differences in physical aggression increase with the degree of risk, occur early in life, peak in young adulthood, and are likely to be mediated by greater mal...

Journal: :Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention 2002
R E Tremblay

Frequent use of physical aggression by humans appears to reach its peak between 2 and 3 years of age. In the following years most children learn alternatives to physical aggression. Approximately 4% of children have high levels of physical aggression from early childhood to late adolescence. These children can be considered to show chronic physical aggression. They are at high risk of causing i...

Journal: :Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines 2004
Anne I H Borge Michael Rutter Sylvana Côté Richard E Tremblay

BACKGROUND Some research findings have suggested that group day-care may be associated with an increased risk for physical aggression. METHODS Cross-sectional maternal questionnaire data from a representative sample of 3431 Canadian 2- to 3-year-olds were used to compare rates of physical aggression shown by children looked after by their own mothers and those attending group day-care. A fami...

Journal: :Journal of consulting and clinical psychology 1994
H S Pan P H Neidig K D O'Leary

Nonordered multinomial logistic models were used to estimate the odds of mild and severe husband-to-wife physical aggression in 11,870 White men. Being younger, having a lower income, and having an alcohol problem significantly increased the odds of either mild or severe physical aggression. A drug problem uniquely increased the risk of severe physical aggression. Marital discord and depressive...

2002
R E Tremblay

Frequent use of physical aggression by humans appears to reach its peak between 2 and 3 years of age. In the following years most children learn alternatives to physical aggression. Approximately 4% of children have high levels of physical aggression from early childhood to late adolescence. These children can be considered to show chronic physical aggression. They are at high risk of causing i...

Journal: :Development and psychopathology 2014
Tracy Vaillancourt Heather L Brittain Patricia McDougall Amanda Krygsman Khrista Boylan Eric Duku Shelley Hymel

Developmental cascade models linking childhood physical and relational aggression with symptoms of depression and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD; assessed at ages 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14) to borderline personality disorder (BPD) features (assessed at age 14) were examined in a community sample of 484 youth. Results indicated that, when controlling for within-time covariance and a...

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