Previous research documents a hostile attribution bias by aggressive boys when considering a social situation with ambiguous cues as to the intention of the participants. The present research evaluated whether this bias extends to the manner in which boys process incoming information. Aggressiveness of boys in grades 3-6 was assessed with peer behavior nominations. In a separate session, each child viewed a videotape of 2 boys playing tag on a playground and segmented the actions using a standard behavior segmentation procedure. A critical event occurred when one of the boys fell down after being tagged, slowly got up, then resumed the game. Prior to viewing the videotape each child received one of three information conditions: benign (the ...
This study examines social information processing and experiences of aggression in social contexts a...
A highly prevalent and relevant situation in which adolescents have to interpret the intentions of o...
Typescript (photocopy).Aggressive/rejected and nonaggressive/accepted boys' attributions concerning ...
Previous research documents a hostile attribution bias by aggressive boys when considering a social ...
Reactive aggression is often linked to social information processing and more specific to the attrib...
The social information-processing model argues that preferentially attending to hostile cues (hostil...
Hostile attributions are acknowledged as an important part of maladaptive social information-process...
In the literature, the tendency to attribute hostile intent is called “hostile attribution bias”. Af...
Contains fulltext : 62262.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A meta-analyti...
Childhood aggression affects a significant number of children and represents the majority of referra...
We tested a model that children's tendency to attribute hostile intent to others in response to prov...
Social information processing theory hypothesizes that aggressive children pay more attention to cue...
Boys with aggressive behavior problems are frequently taught to stop and think before they act. In p...
Boys with aggressive behavior problems are frequently taught to "stop and think" before they act. In...
This study examines social information processing and experiences of aggression in social contexts a...
This study examines social information processing and experiences of aggression in social contexts a...
A highly prevalent and relevant situation in which adolescents have to interpret the intentions of o...
Typescript (photocopy).Aggressive/rejected and nonaggressive/accepted boys' attributions concerning ...
Previous research documents a hostile attribution bias by aggressive boys when considering a social ...
Reactive aggression is often linked to social information processing and more specific to the attrib...
The social information-processing model argues that preferentially attending to hostile cues (hostil...
Hostile attributions are acknowledged as an important part of maladaptive social information-process...
In the literature, the tendency to attribute hostile intent is called “hostile attribution bias”. Af...
Contains fulltext : 62262.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A meta-analyti...
Childhood aggression affects a significant number of children and represents the majority of referra...
We tested a model that children's tendency to attribute hostile intent to others in response to prov...
Social information processing theory hypothesizes that aggressive children pay more attention to cue...
Boys with aggressive behavior problems are frequently taught to stop and think before they act. In p...
Boys with aggressive behavior problems are frequently taught to "stop and think" before they act. In...
This study examines social information processing and experiences of aggression in social contexts a...
This study examines social information processing and experiences of aggression in social contexts a...
A highly prevalent and relevant situation in which adolescents have to interpret the intentions of o...
Typescript (photocopy).Aggressive/rejected and nonaggressive/accepted boys' attributions concerning ...