[jounal] Barry, T. D. / 2007 / The importance of narcissism in predicting proactive and reactive aggression in moderately to
highly aggressive children / Aggressive Behavior 33: 185 ~ 197
Not exact matches
Highly reactive or
aggressive discipline can make his behavior immeasurably worse, so what are some of the strategies you can employ with a sensitive
child?
Early childhood caries, a
highly aggressive and painful form of tooth decay that frequently occurs in preschool
children, especially from backgrounds of poverty, may result from a nefarious partnership between a bacterium and a fungus, according to a paper published ahead of print in the journal Infection and Immunity.
Findings published in Oncotarget offer new hope for
children with
highly aggressive brain tumors like atypical teratoid / rhabdoid tumor (AT / RT) and medulloblastoma.
He is
highly loyal and loving to his owner but the temperamental side of the Chihuahua may cause him to become
aggressive if he feels he has been provoked by
children or other pets.
What this reveals is that
children exposed to early violence display altered responses to confrontation and conflict; in essence they are «hard - wired» to be anxious, distractible,
highly aroused and impulsively
aggressive in situations of conflict.
ANY attempt by a parent to justify IN ANY WAY a
child's
aggressive violence toward anyone (including and especially the other parent) reflects
highly distorted parenting practices and a narcissistic / (borderline) personality organization of the parent who believes that venting of contemptuous anger can be «justified» when the other person «deserves» it.
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) The study evaluated the effectiveness of a parenting training intervention [now called the Parent Management Training — Oregon Model (PMTO)-RSB- in a sample of
children with
highly aggressive behavior.
These findings are
highly promising and suggest that additional studies are needed to further document the range of long - term effects of early preventive intervention, as well as to identify the mediating
child and parent processes underlying long - term reductions in
aggressive behavior.
Parents of
aggressive children are characterized as
highly punitive and critical of their
children35, 36 and more likely to attribute their
children's misbehaviour to more dispositional, intentional and stable causes compared to parents of non-problem
children.37, 38,39 These attributional processes tend to become more pronounced over time.40
For
aggressive children, a
highly positive self - view is construed — not as a protective factor or measurement error — but as a defensive posture that places the
child at added risk and that impedes the progress of psychosocial interventions.