reviewChild DevelopmentSep 1, 2008Closed access

Direct and Indirect Aggression During Childhood and Adolescence: A Meta-Analytic Review of Gender Differences, Intercorrelations, and Relations to Maladjustment

University of Arizona · University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · +1 more institution

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

This meta-analytic review of 148 studies on child and adolescent direct and indirect aggression examined the magnitude of gender differences, intercorrelations between forms, and associations with maladjustment. Results confirmed prior findings of gender differences (favoring boys) in direct aggression and trivial gender differences in indirect aggression. Results also indicated a substantial intercorrelation (r = .76) between these forms. Despite this high intercorrelation, the 2 forms showed unique associations with maladjustment: Direct aggression is more strongly related to externalizing problems, poor peer relations, and low prosocial behavior, and indirect aggression is related to internalizing problems…

Citation impact

1,888
total citations
FWCI
78.80
Percentile
100%
References
186
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Aggression
  • Psychology
  • Moderation
  • Prosocial behavior
  • Developmental psychology
  • Poison control
  • Human factors and ergonomics
  • Injury prevention
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