The impact of
psychological aggression on women's mental health and behavior: The status of the field.
Not exact matches
The study can't rule out the possibility that «television is just a marker» for some unmeasured environmental or
psychological influence
on both
aggression and TV habits.
A longitudinal test of video game violence influences
on dating and
aggression: A 3 - year longitudinal study of adolescents Recent Issues - Volume Six; Date Title Author (s) 08/12/10: The Effects of Humor and Gender
on the Relationship between Social Support and
Psychological
Linda Michaels, M. A., Experimental Psychology (Hons) focuses
on the
psychological aspects of dog behavior that often mirror human
psychological conditions, such as: fear, separation / attachment disorders and
aggression as well as animal wellness.
Trainer Butch Goodwin of Northern Flight Retrievers discusses in his article
on Pre-Stressing your dog the potential dangers of not socializing your dog, «Dogs lacking sufficient socialization often show undesirable
psychological traits such as
aggression, fearfulness, and anti-social behavior in general.»
Includes reports of
psychological news and publications
on such topics as witness issues, victimology, homicide, sexual crime,
aggression, crime reduction, rehabilitation of offenders and PTSD, as well as research from other disciplines that may be relevant (e.g., forensic linguistics, psychiatry, criminology).
Effects were more consistent
on physical abuse, however, with mothers in the treatment group reporting fewer instances of very serious physical abuse at one year and fewer instances of serious abuse at two years.54 In Alaska, the HFA program was associated with less
psychological aggression, but it had no effects for neglect or severe abusive behaviors.55 Similarly, in the San Diego evaluation of HFA, home - visited mothers reported less use of
psychological aggression at twenty - four and thirty - six months.56 Early Start also reported small effects in terms of lowering rates of severe physical abuse.57
Psychological Aggression By American Parents: National Data
on Prevalence, Chronicity, and Severity
When it occurs exclusively, it may have more adverse impact
on the child and
on later adult
psychological functioning than the
psychological consequences of physical abuse, especially with respect to such measures as depression and self - esteem, 7
aggression, delinquency, or interpersonal problems.8
Children who have
psychological problems early
on tend to have higher rates of substance misuse,
aggression, risk - taking behavior, and academic challenges than their peers.
In this prospective study, we relied
on the spillover hypothesis and investigated through an integrated multi-informant model whether maternal
psychological control would account for the associations between interparental conflict and adolescents» relational
aggression and loneliness.
[book] Shaver, P. R. / 2010 / A behavioral systems perspective
on power and
aggression, In Human
aggression and violence / American
Psychological Association: 71 ~ 88
This program was shown to significantly reduce reports of physical
aggression and harmful alcohol consumption, but had no significant effect
on reports of
psychological aggression.
Most research conducted
on the impacts of childhood exposure to domestic violence focus
on the range of
psychological and behavioral impacts including but not limited to depression, anxiety, trauma symptoms, increased
aggression levels, anti-social behaviors, lower social competence, temperament issues, low self - esteem, dysregulated mood, loneliness and increased likelihood of substance abuse.
There is little research reported, however,
on whether direct and indirect
aggression differ in their longitudinal associations with internalizing and externalizing types of
psychological difficulties among adolescents.
Most of this research is cross-sectional, however, and little research has focused
on the developmental associations of direct and indirect
aggression with types of
psychological difficulties by prospective, longitudinal designs.
Total
psychological abuse, threats of violence, acts of violence, and sexual
aggression scores made different contributions to women's health, help seeking, and relationship perceptions depending
on the pattern of abuse they sustained.
Widening the longitudinal perspectives even further, a theoretically important topic concerns the possibility of prospective, reciprocal associations between
aggression or victimization,
on the one hand, and different types of
psychological difficulties
on the other.
The present research focuses
on the distinction between direct and indirect
aggression, and asks if these two forms of
aggression (both for aggressor and victim) are differently associated with various forms of
psychological difficulties.
Moreover, the question
on developmental specificity can be widened to ask also if there are specific associations between various types of
psychological difficulties and direct versus indirect forms of
aggression and victimization.
This clearly suggests that there are important gender differences at least
on being victim to indirect
aggression that needs to be focused
on in future research, as a more detailed knowledge of these processes may be important to understand the development of girls»
psychological difficulties.
Our data indicate that AFQ - Y scores were more substantially correlated with anxiety and depression than with oppositional / conduct problems and
aggression,
on the basis of which one might conclude that
psychological inflexibility is more relevant for internalizing than for externalizing problems.
Childhood studies
on psychological control and children's mental health problems are relatively scarce; however, their results suggest that maternal
psychological control is linked to relational and physical
aggression (Casas et al. 2006) and to externalizing mental health problems (Verhoeven et al. 2010).