2019
DOI: 10.1002/ab.21871
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Adolescent boys’ physical fighting and adult life outcomes: Examining the interplay with intelligence

Abstract: Although it is well known that adolescent delinquent behavior is related to poor outcomes in adulthood, longitudinal research on specific acts of delinquency and their interplay with important individual characteristics in predicting future outcomes is scarce. We aimed to examine how physical fighting-one of the most common acts of violent delinquency among adolescent boys-is related to adult life success in several domains, and how intelligence influences these associations. The study used data from 1,083 boy… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In line with previous studies (Frøyland & von Soest, 2020;Kokkinos et al, 2021;Quan et al, 2022), anger at T1 was significantly correlated with anger rumination and reactive aggression at T2, indicating that individuals with higher-level anger are more likely to experience anger rumination and engage in reactive aggression. Furthermore, the mediating effect of anger rumination between anger and reactive-aggression can explain the underlying mechanism of anger inducing reactive aggression.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…In line with previous studies (Frøyland & von Soest, 2020;Kokkinos et al, 2021;Quan et al, 2022), anger at T1 was significantly correlated with anger rumination and reactive aggression at T2, indicating that individuals with higher-level anger are more likely to experience anger rumination and engage in reactive aggression. Furthermore, the mediating effect of anger rumination between anger and reactive-aggression can explain the underlying mechanism of anger inducing reactive aggression.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Overall, physical attacks and fights have important consequences for adolescent psychosocial development, educational attainment, self-confidence, intelligence [44], health [37,[45][46][47] and physical disability [46]. While there remains a paucity of evidence in this area, epidemiological studies in different settings and a systematic review in sub-Saharan African indicates that there is increasing recognition of the impact of violence on adolescent health and wellbeing [47,48].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given that interpersonal violence is a core aspect of overt conduct disorder, it is not clear why interpersonal violence predicted T2 enlistment while conduct disorder did not. However, it may be related to the fact that interpersonal violence in adolescence is associated with a lower likelihood of employment (Carter, 2019;Frøyland & von Soest, 2020). Limited occupational opportunities might make military service more attractive, particularly given that the military offers competitive compensation and benefits.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%