TY - JOUR PY - 2014// TI - Adolescents' aggressive and prosocial behaviors: links with social information processing, negative emotionality, moral affect, and moral cognition JO - Journal of genetic psychology A1 - Laible, Deborah J. A1 - Murphy, Tia Panfile A1 - Augustine, Mairin SP - 270 EP - 286 VL - 175 IS - 3-4 N2 - The goal of this study was to examine whether moral affect, moral cognition, negative emotionality, and attribution biases independently predicted adolescents' prosocial and aggressive behavior in adolescence. A total of 148 adolescents completed self-report measures of prosocial and aggressive behavior, moral affect, moral cognition, negative emotionality, and attribution biases. Although in general all 3 factors (emotional, moral, and social cognitive) were correlated with adolescent social behavior, the most consistent independent predictors of adolescent social behavior were moral affect and cognition. These findings have important implications for intervention and suggest that programs that promote adolescent perspective taking, moral reasoning, and moral affect are needed to reduce aggressive behavior and promote prosocial behavior.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0022-1325 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00221325.2014.885878 ID - ref1 ER -