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Journal Article

Citation

Boling P. Psychol. Sch. 2001; 38(2): 93-106.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Youthful antisocial behavior is often viewed as a precursor to later violent and threatening behavior. Olweus (1979) reported aggressive reaction patterns in males that over time approached the stability of intelligence. While Olweus did not examine violent behavior directly, his study is often cited as evidence for the stability of violence. To examine the evidence for this assertion, this study synthesized the evidence from 82 reports of 58 prospective studies that followed individuals over some period of their life span. After correcting effect sizes for exogenous study features, the grand mean correlation of antisocial and substance misusing behaviors with later crimes against persons was estimated to be r = .33, a far cry from the stability of intelligence. Because these predictors are often used to select people into intervention, this study estimated the conditional error rates associated with identification for preventive intervention. Overall, selection failed to identify 66% of those who displayed later violence, while on average, 60% of those engaging in antisocial or substance-using behavior were not later violent. (Abstract Adapted from Source: Psychology in the Schools, 2001. Copyright © 2001 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)

Juvenile Violence
Student Violence
School Violence
Violence Prediction
Meta-Analysis
Juvenile Antisocial Behavior
Juvenile Behavior
Juvenile Substance Use
Juvenile Aggression
Behavior Effects
Substance Use Effects
Drug Use Effects
Aggression Effects
04-01

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