Back to Top

Paper Title

Mechanisms in the Cycle of Violence

Authors

Gregory S. Pettit
Gregory S. Pettit
John Bates
John Bates
Kenneth Dodge
Kenneth Dodge

Keywords

  • Physical Abuse
  • Early Childhood
  • Aggressive Behavior
  • Risk Factor
  • Antisocial Development
  • Social Information Processing
  • Family Ecological Factors
  • Biological Variables
  • Child Development
  • Cycle of Violence
  • Temperament
  • Marital Violence
  • Family Instability
  • Deviant Patterns
  • Prospective Stud

Article Type

Research Article

Journal

Science

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 250 | Issue : 4988 | Page No : 1678-1683

Published On

December, 1990

Downloads

Abstract

Two questions concerning the effect of physical abuse in early childhood on the child's development of aggressive behavior are the focus of this article. The first is whether abuse per se has deleterious effects. In earlier studies, in which samples were nonrepresentative and family ecological factors (such as poverty, marital violence, and family instability) and child biological variables (such as early health problems and temperament) were ignored, findings have been ambiguous. Results from a prospective study of a representative sample of 309 children indicated that physical abuse is indeed a risk factor for later aggressive behavior even when the other ecological and biological factors are known. The second question concerns the processes by which antisocial development occurs in abused children. Abused children tended to acquire deviant patterns of processing social information, and these may mediate the development of aggressive behavior.

View more >>