In this review, three primary agents of social learning (parent-child interaction, peer interaction and television) are examined in relation to the development of aggressive personality during the formative years (infancy, early childhood, middle childhood, and adolescence). Research has revealed all three agents as influential in the development of aggression, with the majority of research emphasizing middle childhood as a critical period for peer relationships. This paper suggests that the success or failure of peer relationships during middle childhood is a direct reflection of the social learning that took place during parent-infant and early childhood interactions. Hence, each stage, infancy through adolescence, is a developmental buil...
Aggressive behaviors in adolescence often originate in early development. This study tested three lo...
This study examined trajectories of aggression and rule breaking during the transition from childhoo...
Different manifestations of aggression from childhood to early adulthood are reviewed to establish h...
The major issues of the present appear tobe, in large measure, the same ones that thoughtful contrib...
The papers in this special issue argue that aggression is not always bad, that some forms of aggress...
Research suggests that the age at which humans are most physically aggressive is at the end of the s...
Background: This study examines how and why children change in aggression and delinquency from age 6...
Objective: From a developmental systems perspective, the origins of maladjusted behavior are multifa...
A considerable amount of research has demonstrated cross-sectional associations between aggression a...
Abstract Background Past research has shown links bet...
We evaluated the extent to which aggressive victims show unique developmental pathways that are diff...
For a sample followed from age 9–13 (N5 281), this investigation examined developmental trajectories...
Recent data from several longitudinal studies including one spanning 22 years suggest that aggressi...
Aggression has always been an important concern of mankind. The pervasive question of why human bein...
Aggression, as a variable of psychological study, has the hallmarks of a deeply ingrained personalit...
Aggressive behaviors in adolescence often originate in early development. This study tested three lo...
This study examined trajectories of aggression and rule breaking during the transition from childhoo...
Different manifestations of aggression from childhood to early adulthood are reviewed to establish h...
The major issues of the present appear tobe, in large measure, the same ones that thoughtful contrib...
The papers in this special issue argue that aggression is not always bad, that some forms of aggress...
Research suggests that the age at which humans are most physically aggressive is at the end of the s...
Background: This study examines how and why children change in aggression and delinquency from age 6...
Objective: From a developmental systems perspective, the origins of maladjusted behavior are multifa...
A considerable amount of research has demonstrated cross-sectional associations between aggression a...
Abstract Background Past research has shown links bet...
We evaluated the extent to which aggressive victims show unique developmental pathways that are diff...
For a sample followed from age 9–13 (N5 281), this investigation examined developmental trajectories...
Recent data from several longitudinal studies including one spanning 22 years suggest that aggressi...
Aggression has always been an important concern of mankind. The pervasive question of why human bein...
Aggression, as a variable of psychological study, has the hallmarks of a deeply ingrained personalit...
Aggressive behaviors in adolescence often originate in early development. This study tested three lo...
This study examined trajectories of aggression and rule breaking during the transition from childhoo...
Different manifestations of aggression from childhood to early adulthood are reviewed to establish h...