AI Article Synopsis

  • Adolescent aggression significantly affects mental health and social functioning, and this study examines the roles of executive dysfunction, impulsivity, and sex in both reactive and proactive aggression among Chinese adolescents.
  • A longitudinal study with 617 middle school students found that executive dysfunction predicted both types of aggression, with impulsivity acting as a partial mediator of this relationship.
  • Results highlighted that sex influences these dynamics, as impulsivity affected proactive aggression only in males, while both genders showed impulsivity's impact on reactive aggression, stronger among males.

Article Abstract

Background: Adolescent aggression poses a significant threat to mental health and social functioning. This study investigated the underlying mechanisms of reactive and proactive aggression in Chinese adolescents, focusing on the roles of executive dysfunction, impulsivity, and sex. We hypothesized that executive dysfunction would predict both reactive and proactive aggression, with impulsivity mediating these relationships. Furthermore, we explored the moderating role of sex in the association between impulsivity and both types of aggression.

Method: A longitudinal design with a 1-year follow-up was employed. The sample comprised 617 middle school students (mean age = 15.26 years at Time 2; 59% male). Participants completed self-report questionnaires at two time points (T1: April 2023; T2: April 2024): the Reactive-Proactive Aggression Questionnaire (RPQ), the Teenage Executive Functioning Inventory (TEXI), and the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS).

Results: Executive dysfunction at T1 significantly predicted both proactive and reactive aggression at T2. Impulsivity at T2 partially mediated the relationship between executive dysfunction at T1 and both proactive and reactive aggression at T2. Sex moderated the relationship between impulsivity and aggression. Specifically, impulsivity at T2 significantly predicted proactive aggression at T2 only in male adolescents. Impulsivity at T2 significantly predicted reactive aggression at T2 in both male and female adolescents, with a stronger effect observed in males.

Conclusion: Our findings suggest that executive dysfunction contributes to adolescent aggression both directly and indirectly through increased impulsivity. Sex plays a moderating role, with male adolescents demonstrating greater vulnerability to the influence of impulsivity on aggression. These results underscore the importance of considering executive function, impulsivity, and sex in the development of interventions to prevent and reduce adolescent aggression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11695426PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1484340DOI Listing

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