Using data from two American and one Finnish long-term longitudinal studies, we examined continuity of general aggression from age 8 to physical aggression in early adulthood (age 21–30) and whether continuity of aggression differed by country, sex, and parent occupational status. In all samples, childhood aggression was assessed via peer nominations and early adulthood aggression via self-reports. Multi-group structural equation models revealed significant continuity in aggression in the American samples but not in the Finnish sample. These relations did not differ by sex but did differ by parent occupational status: whereas there was no significant continuity among American children from professional family-of-origin backgrounds, t...
Using data from the Columbia County Longitudinal Study, a 40-year longitudinal study following an en...
It is well understood in aggression research that males tend to exhibit higher levels of physical ag...
In this cross-sectional study we examined a model in which parenting, child social information proce...
Using data from two American and one Finnish long-term longitudinal studies, we examined continuity...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109352/1/ab21546.pd
This study examined the prediction of different forms of adult aggression in two countries from chil...
This study examined the prediction of different forms of adult aggression in 2 countries from child ...
Parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression both predict the emergence of child aggression, ...
For a sample followed from age 9–13 (N5 281), this investigation examined developmental trajectories...
In a study spanning 22 years, data were collected on the aggressiveness of over 600 subjects, their ...
Abstract\ud Sex differences in base rates of aggression are well-established, with males showing hig...
Objective: From a developmental systems perspective, the origins of maladjusted behavior are multifa...
Using data from the Columbia County Longitudinal Study, a 40-year longitudinal study following an en...
Distinguishing between relational and physical aggression has become a key feature of many developme...
Distinguishing between relational and physical aggression has become a key feature of many developme...
Using data from the Columbia County Longitudinal Study, a 40-year longitudinal study following an en...
It is well understood in aggression research that males tend to exhibit higher levels of physical ag...
In this cross-sectional study we examined a model in which parenting, child social information proce...
Using data from two American and one Finnish long-term longitudinal studies, we examined continuity...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109352/1/ab21546.pd
This study examined the prediction of different forms of adult aggression in two countries from chil...
This study examined the prediction of different forms of adult aggression in 2 countries from child ...
Parent and child endorsement of reactive aggression both predict the emergence of child aggression, ...
For a sample followed from age 9–13 (N5 281), this investigation examined developmental trajectories...
In a study spanning 22 years, data were collected on the aggressiveness of over 600 subjects, their ...
Abstract\ud Sex differences in base rates of aggression are well-established, with males showing hig...
Objective: From a developmental systems perspective, the origins of maladjusted behavior are multifa...
Using data from the Columbia County Longitudinal Study, a 40-year longitudinal study following an en...
Distinguishing between relational and physical aggression has become a key feature of many developme...
Distinguishing between relational and physical aggression has become a key feature of many developme...
Using data from the Columbia County Longitudinal Study, a 40-year longitudinal study following an en...
It is well understood in aggression research that males tend to exhibit higher levels of physical ag...
In this cross-sectional study we examined a model in which parenting, child social information proce...