Baillargeon Raymond H, Zoccolillo Mark, Keenan Kate, Côté Sylvana, Pérusse Daniel, Wu Hong-Xing, Boivin Michel, Tremblay Richard E
Department of Psychiatry, Centre de Recherche de l'Hôpital Sainte-Justine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Canada.
Dev Psychol. 2007 Jan;43(1):13-26. doi: 10.1037/0012-1649.43.1.13.
There has been much controversy over the past decades on the origins of gender differences in children's aggressive behavior. A widely held view is that gender differences emerge sometime after 2 years of age and increase in magnitude thereafter because of gender-differentiated socialization practices. The objective of this study was to test for (a) gender differences in the prevalence of physical aggression in the general population of 17-month-old children and (b) change in the magnitude of these differences between 17 and 29 months of age. Contrary to the differential socialization hypothesis, the results showed substantial gender differences in the prevalence of physical aggression at 17 months of age, with 5% of boys but only 1% of girls manifesting physically aggressive behaviors on a frequent basis. The results suggest that there is no change in the magnitude of these differences between 17 and 29 months of age.
在过去几十年里,关于儿童攻击性行为中性别差异的起源存在诸多争议。一种广泛持有的观点是,性别差异在2岁之后的某个时候出现,并在此后因性别分化的社会化实践而扩大。本研究的目的是检验:(a)17个月大儿童的一般人群中身体攻击行为发生率的性别差异;(b)17至29个月大期间这些差异的大小变化。与差异社会化假设相反,结果显示17个月大时身体攻击行为发生率存在显著的性别差异,5%的男孩经常表现出身体攻击行为,而只有1%的女孩如此。结果表明,17至29个月大期间这些差异的大小没有变化。