The purpose of this study was to determine (1) whether adolescent females with a conduct disorder (CD) demonstrate inferior language skills and lower executive cognitive functioning (ECF) compared with controls and (2) whether the relations between language abilities and different forms of antisocia
Relations between self-serving cognitive distortions and overt vs. covert antisocial behavior in adolescents
โ Scribed by Albert K. Liau; Alvaro Q. Barriga; John C. Gibbs
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 70 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0096-140X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The present study addressed the relations between cognitive distortions (inaccurate thoughts, attitudes, or beliefs) and antisocial behavior that is either overt/confrontational (e.g., fighting) or covert/nonconfrontational (e.g., stealing). A controlled analysis of 52 male delinquents and a comparison sample of 51 high school students aged 14-18 years found the delinquents to be higher in both cognitive distortions and selfreported antisocial behavior. Furthermore, cognitive distortion related specifically to overt and covert antisocial behavior in both samples. In particular, cognitive distortion having overt antisocial behavior as its referent (e.g., "People need to be roughed up once in a while") evidenced a significant path to overt but not covert antisocial behavior. Conversely, covert-referential cognitive distortion (e.g, "If someone is careless enough to lose a wallet, they deserve to have it stolen") evidenced a significant path to covert but not overt antisocial behavior. The theoretical and treatment implications of the findings are discussed.
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