Social-Information-Processing Patterns Mediate the Impact of Preventive Intervention on Adolescent Antisocial Behavior

Literatuur

In the study reported here, we tested the hypothesis that the Fast Track preventive intervention's positive impact on antisocial behavior in adolescence is mediated by its impact on social-cognitive processes during elementary school. Fast Track is the largest and longest federally funded preventive intervention trial for children showing aggressive behavior at an early age. Participants were 891 high-risk kindergarten children (69% male, 31% female; 49% ethnic minority, 51% ethnic majority) who were randomly assigned to an intervention or a control group by school cluster. Multiyear intervention addressed social-cognitive processes through social-skill training groups, parent groups, classroom curricula, peer coaching, and tutoring. Assigning children to the intervention decreased their mean antisocial-behavior score after Grade 9 by 0.16 standardized units (p<.01 structural equation models indicated that of the intervention impact on antisocial behavior was mediated by its three social-cognitive processes: reducing hostile-attribution biases increasing competent response generation to social problems and devaluing aggression. these findings support a model behavioral development processes they guide prevention planners focus processes.>

Auteur(s)
Dodge, KA; Godwin, J; Group Author(s): Conduct Problems Prevention Res
Jaar
2013
Bron
Psychological Science 24(4): 456-465 Apr 2013