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Article
Response decision processes and externalizing behavior problems in adolescents
Development and psychopathology
  • R. G. Fontaine
  • Virginia Burks Salzer, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine
  • K. A. Dodge
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2002
Disciplines
Abstract

Externalizing behavior problems of 124 adolescents were assessed across Grades 7-11. In Grade 9, participants were also assessed across social-cognitive domains after imagining themselves as the object of provocations portrayed in six videotaped vignettes. Participants responded to vignette-based questions representing multiple processes of the response decision step of social information processing. Phase 1 of our investigation supported a two-factor model of the response evaluation process of response decision (response valuation and outcome expectancy). Phase 2 showed significant relations between the set of these response decision processes, as well as response selection, measured in Grade 9 and (a) externalizing behavior in Grade 9 and (b) externalizing behavior in Grades 10-11, even after controlling externalizing behavior in Grades 7-8. These findings suggest that on-line behavioral judgments about aggression play a crucial role in the maintenance and growth of aggressive response tendencies in adolescence. Copyright © 2002 Cambridge University Press.

Comments

This article was published in Development and psychopathology, Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 107-122.

The published version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954579402001062.

Copyright © 2002 Cambridge University Press.

Citation Information
R. G. Fontaine, Virginia Burks Salzer and K. A. Dodge. "Response decision processes and externalizing behavior problems in adolescents" Development and psychopathology Vol. 14 Iss. 1 (2002) p. 107 - 122
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/virginia_salzer/1/