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Journal Article

Citation

de Castro BO, Veerman JW, Koops W, Bosch JD, Monshouwer HJ. Child Dev. 2002; 73(3): 916-934.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

A meta-analytic review was conducted to explain divergent findings on the relation between children's aggressive behavior and hostile attribution of intent to peers. Forty-one studies with 6,017 participants were included in the analysis. Ten studies concerned representative samples from the general population, 24 studies compared nonaggressive to extremely aggressive nonreferred samples, and 7 studies compared nonreferred samples with children referred for aggressive behavior problems. A robust significant association between hostile attribution of intent and aggressive behavior was found. Effect sizes differed considerably between studies. Larger effects were associated with more severe aggressive behavior, rejection by peers as one of the selection criteria, inclusion of 8- to-12-year-old participants, and absence of control for intelligence. Video and picture presentation of stimuli were associated with smaller effect sizes than was audio presentation. Staging of actual social interactions was associated with the largest effects. The importance of understanding moderators of effect size for theory development is stressed. (Abstract Adapted from Source: Child Development, 2002. Copyright © 2002 by the Society for Research in Child Development; Blackwell Publishers, Inc.)

Child Aggression
Late Childhood
Middle Childhood
Meta-Analysis
Peer Relations
Social Interaction
Child Hostility
08-02

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