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Journal Article

Citation

Boxer P, Tisak MS, Goldstein SE. J. Youth Adolesc. 2004; 33(2): 91-100.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Research in aggressive behavior development has distinguished between proactive (i.e., intended to achieve an instrumental goal) and reactive (i.e., emitted as an emotional response to provocation) subtypes of aggression. A similar distinction has not been made with regard to prosocial behavior. In this study, subtypes of both aggressive and prosocial behavior and their relation to aggression-supporting social cognitions were examined in a sample of 250 early and middle adolescents. Adolescents completed behavior rating scales and a measure of their beliefs about the acceptability of responding aggressively. Principal components analysis identified 3 subtypes of aggressive and prosocial behavior: aggressive, prosocial, and proactive prosocial. Proactive prosocial behavior was positively correlated with aggression and aggression-supporting beliefs, while other prosocial behavior was negatively correlated with these constructs. Findings are discussed in the context of aggressive behavior development and with regard to traditional views of prosocial behavior as altruistic. (Abstract Adapted from Source: Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2004. Copyright © 2004 by Springer)

Juvenile Aggression
Juvenile Behavior
Juvenile Prosocial Behavior
Reactive Aggression
Proactive Aggression
Agression Causes
Attitudes Toward Aggression
Aggression Perceptions
Juvenile Attitudes
Juvenile Perceptions
05-05

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