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Journal Article

Citation

Herzberger SD, Hall JA. Child Dev. 1993; 64(6): 1773-1785.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Trinity College, Hartford, CT 06106.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8112118

Abstract

Expectations about the outcomes of retaliation against siblings were compared to those about peers in a group of 10-14-year-old, mostly African-American or Hispanic youth. Boys believed that parents would disapprove more of retaliation against siblings than friends, while girls believed parents would equally disapprove of retaliation against either target. Participants of both genders expected that retaliation would deter additional aggressive actions of friends more than of siblings. Participants expected younger siblings, especially brothers, to feel worse than older siblings following retaliation, and girls expected to feel worse retaliating against younger siblings. Siblings close in age expect fewer negative consequences of retaliation. Children's expectations seem to promote more aggression toward friends than siblings and to promote aggression toward siblings closer in age. No ethnic differences emerged in expectations about conflict. The findings are discussed in relation to research on expectations as a mediator of behavior.


Language: en

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