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Social information processing skills link executive functions to aggression in adolescents with mild to borderline intellectual disability
Authors:Maaike M Van Rest  Walter Matthys  Maroesjka Van Nieuwenhuijzen  Marleen HM De Moor  Aart Vriens  Carlo Schuengel
Institution:1. Department of Clinical Child and Family Studies, and Amsterdam Public Health, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Department of Child and Adolescent Studies, Utrecht University, and Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands;3. Research and Expertise Center William Schrikker, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;4. Department for Psychology and Adult Care, RIBW, Purmerend, The Netherlands
Abstract:Executive Functions (EFs) have been associated with aggression in children and adolescents. EFs as higher-order cognitive abilities are assumed to affect cognitive functions such as Social Information Processing (SIP). We explored SIP skills as a mediating mechanism linking EFs to aggression in adolescents with mild to borderline intellectual disability (MBID with IQ from 50–84), a high risk group for aggressive behaviors and EF impairments. A total of 153 adolescents (Mage = 15.24, SD = 1.35; 54% male) with MBID participated. Focused attention, behavioral inhibition, and working memory were tested with multiple neurocognitive tasks to define latent EF constructs. Participants responded to a video-based SIP task. A latent construct for aggression was defined by caretaker, teacher, and adolescent self-reports of aggression (Child Behavior Check List, Teacher Report Form, and Youth Self Report). Structural equation modeling was performed to test mediation. Results were consistent with mediation of the relation between focused attention and aggression by SIP, namely via hostile interpretations and self-efficacy for aggression. Behavioral inhibition was linked to aggression, but this relation was not mediated by SIP. The relation between working memory and aggression was mediated by SIP, namely via hostile interpretations, aggressive response generation and via self-efficacy for aggressive responses. Bearing the cross-sectional design in mind, support was found for SIP skills as a mechanism linking EFs, in particular focused attention and working memory, to aggression, providing a viable explanation for the high vulnerability of adolescents with MBID for aggression.
Keywords:Social information processing  executive function  aggression  intellectual disability  focused attention  working memory  inhibition  adolescent
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