[jounal] Kim, S. / 2010 / Change in the manifestation of overt
aggression during early adolescence: Gender and ethnicity / School Psychology International 31 (1): 95 ~ 111
Examination of peer - group contextual effects on
aggression during early adolescence.
Examination of peer group contextual effects on
aggression during early adolescence.
Not exact matches
Some observers have argued that female offenders can, in theory, be either adolescent - limited or life - course - persistent and that the relative scarcity of
early - onset
aggression in females indicates that they are generally less likely to follow the latter pathway.56 Others, however, have argued that the relative prevalence of adolescent - onset
aggression in girls (compared with childhood - onset) indicates that persistent delinquency simply manifests at a later age in girls than it does in boys.57 In Persephanie Silverthorn and Paul Frick's model, girls and boys are influenced by similar risk factors
during childhood, but the onset of delinquent behavior in girls is delayed by the more stringent social controls imposed on them before
adolescence.
Smoking
during pregnancy has been shown to predict antisocial behavior
during later childhood and
adolescence.36 — 40 Our results show that it predicts high levels of physical
aggression in infancy after having controlled for many of the confounding variables that could explain the association, eg, antisocial behavior, low education, postpartum depression, and
early parenthood.
Lying and substance use increased with age, whereas relational
aggression and impulsivity peaked
during early adolescence.