Developmental Psychology of Aggression

Stoff, David M

Developmental Psychology of Aggression - New York Cambridge University 2005 - 304p

includes index and biblioraphy

1. Integrated Perspective for Psychobiological Research in Aggression: An Introduction 3 David M. Staff and Elizabeth ]. Susman PART I PLASTICITY 2. The Interaction of Biological and Social Measures in the Explanation of Antisocial and Violent Behavior 13 Adrian Raine 3. Social Deprivation, Social-Emotional Behavior, and the Plasticity of Dopamine Function 43 Paul L. Gendreau and Mark H. Lewis 4. Animal Studies on Inappropriate Aggressive Behavior Following Stress and Alcohol Exposure in Adolescence 69 Craig F. Fern`s 5. Links Between Girls` Puberty and Externalizing and Internalizing Behaviors: Moving from Demonstrating Effects to Identifying Pathways 87 Julia A. Graber, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, and Andrea B. Archibald PART II BIDIRECTIONALITY 6. Touch Deprivation and Aggression Against Self Among Adolescents 117 Tiffany Field 7. Intersections of Biology and Behavior in Young Children`s Antisocial Patterns: The Role of Development, Gender and Socialization 141 Carolyn Zahn-Waxler, Barbara Usher, Stephen Suomi, and Pamela M. Cole 8. Life-Course Persistent and Adolescence-Limited Antisocial Males: Longitudinal Followup to Adulthood 161 Terrie E. Moffitt and Avshalom Caspi 9. A Biocultural Life History Approach to the Developmental Psychobiology of Male Aggression 187 Carol M. Worthman and Ryan A. Brown PART III GENE-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS 10. Toward an Integrative Account of the Development of Aggressive Behavior 225 Kathryn E. Hood 11. How Gene-Environment Interactions Shape the Development of Impulsive Aggression in Rhesus Monkeys 252 Stephen J. Suomi CONCLUSION 12. Synthesis and Reconsiderations of the Psychobiology of Aggressive Behavior: A Conclusion 271 Elizabeth J. Susman and David M. Staff

9780521826013 5692

O40 / St660

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