Good learners or trouble makers? Study on the relationship between academic performance and antisocial behavior of junior high school students. [PDF]
Zhu X, Jiang W, Shi W, Shi J.
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Health Service Utilization in Adolescents Following a First Arrest: The Role of Antisocial Behavior, Callous-Unemotional Traits, and Juvenile Justice System Processing. [PDF]
Speck JS +9 more
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Cumulative Risk and Cumulative Protection: Relative Contributions to Predicting Substance Use, Antisocial Behaviour and Mental Health Across Development. [PDF]
Halvorson MA +5 more
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The genetics of antisocial behavior
Current Psychiatry Reports, 2001Overall, the evidence from over 100 twin and adoption studies of antisocial behavior suggests that genetic factors account for about half of the variation in risk. However, behavioral genetic studies of antisocial behavior still tend to produce far-ranging estimates of heritability, suggesting that there may be important moderators of these genetic ...
Wendy S Slutske
exaly +3 more sources
Is speeding a “real” antisocial behavior? A comparison with other antisocial behaviors
Accident Analysis & Prevention, 2007The relationship between speed and crashes has been well established in the literature, with the consequence that speed reduction through enforced or other means should lead to a reduction in crashes. The extent to which the public regard speeding as a problem that requires enforcement is less clear.
Damian R, Poulter, Frank P, McKenna
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Hyperactivity and Antisocial Behavior
Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry, 1978Abstract This paper reviews evidence that the hyperactive child syndrome is connected with the development of delinquent, antisocial behavior in childhood, adolescence, and later life. The evidence comes from childhood histories of adults with antisocial disorders, post facto and prospective follow-up studies of hyperactive children, from family ...
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INDIVIDUAL ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1955CHILDREN from so-called good homes who recurrently steal, truant, set fires, or exhibit sexual aberrations are usually doing what their parents unconsciously wish and tell them to do. The delinquencies under consideration are those arising in apparently "normal" families of good reputation and are not those largely determined sociologically in slums ...
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AbstractThis article discusses antisocial behavior orders (ASBOs) in England and Wales and recent U.S. policies based on the broken windows hypothesis. The broken windows hypothesis and its policy progeny and ASBOs implicate different categories of troubling behavior, each of which raises distinct normative and policy issues.
Michael Tonry, Harriet Bildsten
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Anonymity and Group Antisocial Behavior
The Journal of Social Psychology, 1976Summary According to the anonymity explanation of group antisocial behavior, group membership facilitates antisocial behavior because individuals feel more anonymous in groups than alone. This explanation was tested under three hypotheses: (a) group membership facilitates antisocial behavior, (b) group membership causes feelings of anonymity, and (c ...
E W, Mathes, T A, Guest
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A developmental perspective on antisocial behavior.
American Psychologist, 1989A developmental model of antisocial behavior is outlined. Recent findings are reviewed that concern the etiology and course of antisocial behavior from early childhood through adolescence. Evidence is presented in support of the hypothesis that the route to chronic delinquency is marked by a reliable developmental sequence of experiences.
G R, Patterson +2 more
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