• Title of article

    In the Eye of the Beholder: Eye-tracking Assessment of Social Information Processing in Aggressive Behavior

  • Author/Authors

    Tako A. Horsley، نويسنده , , Bram Orobio de Castro & Menno Van der Schoot، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    587
  • To page
    599
  • Abstract
    Acording to social information processing theories, aggressive children are hypersensitive to cues of hostility and threat in other people’s behavior. However, even though there is ample evidence that aggressive children over-interpret others’ behaviors as hostile, it is unclear whether this hostile attribution tendency does actually result from overattending to hostile and threatening cues. Since encoding is posited to consist of rapid automatic processes, it is hard to assess with the selfreport measures that have been used so far. Therefore, we used a novel approach to investigate visual encoding of social information. The eye movements of thirty 10–13 year old children with lower levels and thirty children with higher levels of aggressive behavior were monitored in real time with an eyetracker, as the children viewed ten different cartoon series of ambiguous provocation situations. In addition, participants answered questions concerning encoding and interpretation. Aggressive children did not attend more to hostile cues, nor attend less to non-hostile cues than non-aggressive children. Contrary, aggressive children looked longer at non-hostile cues, but nonetheless attributed more hostile intent than their non-aggressive peers. These findings contradict the traditional bottom-up processing hypotheses that aggressive behavior would be related with failure to attend to non-hostile cues. The findings seem best explained by topdown information processing, where aggressive children’s pre-existing hostile intent schemata (1) direct attention towards schema inconsistent nonhostile cues, (2) prevent further processing and recall of such schema-inconsistent information, and (3) lead to hostile intent attribution and aggressive responding, disregarding the schema-inconsistent non-hostile information
  • Keywords
    Aggressive behavior . Social cognition .Information processing . Social information processing
  • Journal title
    Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
  • Record number

    829135