Disruptive Behavior Disorders

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Dublin Core

Title

Disruptive Behavior Disorders

Subject

bullying; moral disengagement; violence; disruptive behavior; peer aggression; social rules; socialization; externalizing symptoms; antisocial personality problems; emerging adulthood; family functioning; impulsivity; empathy; suicidality; non-suicidal self-injuries; bipolar disorder; psychopathic traits; childhood; fearlessness; parental warmth; conscience development; big five personality traits model; childrearing; mother rejection; structural equation modeling; values; substance use; aggression; cognitive-behavioral; group intervention; callous–unemotional traits; conduct problems; cyberbullying; gender; mindfulness; reactive aggression; Coping Power; self-regulation; prevention; Mindful Coping Power; disruptive behavior disorders

Description

Disruptive behavior disorders (DBD) refer to a group of conditions that typically share difficulties in modulating aggressive conducts, self-control, and impulses, with resulting behaviors that constitute a threat to others’ safety and to social norms. Problematic issues with self-control associated with these disorders are commonly first observed in childhood, but may often persist into adolescence and adulthood, or pose a developmental risk for subsequent negative outcomes. The clinical management of DBD in childhood and adolescence has seen great advances in recent years, and research has also focused on identifying early signs, predictors, and risk factors, which may help clinicians to disentangle and subtype the heterogeneous manifestations of BDB. This has allowed significant progress to be made in defining specific developmental trajectories, targeted prevention programs, and timely treatment strategies. The principal aims of this Special Issue were thus to address three core features of DBD clinical management, the multidimensional assessment of callous–unemotional traits, empathic faults and emotional dysregulation, and the available treatment options. In this Special Issue, twelve relevant contributions, including ten original articles, one systematic review, and one study protocol, which provide novel insights for the assessment and treatment of DBD in clinical practice, have been collected by the editors.

Creator

Milone, Annarita (editor)
Sesso, Gianluca (editor)

Source

https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/5327

Publisher

MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Date

Basel, 2022

Contributor

Dwi Prihastuti

Rights

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Format

pdf

Language

English

Type

Textbooks

Identifier

DOI
10.3390/books978-3-0365-3627-9

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