학술논문

The Relation between Aggression and Theory of Mind in Children: A Meta-Analysis
Document Type
Journal Articles
Information Analyses
Reports - Research
Source
Developmental Science. Mar 2023 26(2).
Subject
Young Children
Children
Adolescents
Theory of Mind
Aggression
Bullying
Interpersonal Competence
Language
English
ISSN
1363-755X
1467-7687
Abstract
Previous findings on the association between theory of mind (ToM) and aggression in children are mixed. The "social skills deficit view" regarded ToM as a "single-edged sword" and proposed that a lack of ToM can lead to aggression, while the "double-edged sword view" proposed that children with advanced ToM can still show much aggression because children can also leverage ToM to harm others. To resolve the dispute between the two views, we conducted a meta-analysis combining cross-sectional and longitudinal findings from 53 studies including a total of 11,579 children aged between 2 and 15 years. The overall negative correlation between ToM and aggression was small but significant (r = -0.08). The negative correlation was robust, with the magnitude of the correlation being similar across physical versus relational aggression, proactive versus reactive aggression, cognitive versus affective ToM, preschoolers versus school-aged children, different aggression measurements, and different levels of societal individualism. Moreover, the negative correlation was found regardless of whether ToM and aggression were measured concurrently or at different time points, but the correlation was the largest when ToM was measured before aggression. Whether the aggression was bullying or not also moderated the association, with ToM only being negatively related to non-bullying aggression but not bullying. Together, these findings suggest that ToM is a "single-edged sword" to decrease general aggression and that aggression might also give rise to lower ToM capacity during development.