Violent Offending Promotes Appetitive Aggression Rather than Posttraumatic Stress-A Replication Study with Burundian Ex-Combatants.

scientific article

Violent Offending Promotes Appetitive Aggression Rather than Posttraumatic Stress-A Replication Study with Burundian Ex-Combatants. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.3389/FPSYG.2015.01755
P932PMC publication ID4672083
P698PubMed publication ID26696913
P5875ResearchGate publication ID286243013

P50authorAnselm CrombachQ57065073
Britta U WestnerQ59676997
P2093author name stringThomas Elbert
Manassé Bambonyé
Anke Köbach
Corina Nandi
P2860cites workIntrusive images in psychological disorders: characteristics, neural mechanisms, and treatment implicationsQ24632076
The psychological risks of Vietnam for U.S. veterans: a revisit with new data and methodsQ24673683
An introduction to recursive partitioning: rationale, application, and characteristics of classification and regression trees, bagging, and random forestsQ30496268
Differences in brain circuitry for appetitive and reactive aggression as revealed by realistic auditory scriptsQ30606257
Conditional variable importance for random forestsQ33351067
A cognitive model of posttraumatic stress disorderQ33889369
Human aggressionQ34106135
When combat prevents PTSD symptoms--results from a survey with former child soldiers in Northern UgandaQ34268296
Appetitive aggression as a resilience factor against trauma disorders: appetitive aggression and PTSD in German World War II veteransQ34515940
Combat high or traumatic stress: violent offending is associated with appetitive aggression but not with symptoms of traumatic stressQ34850678
The thrill of being violent as an antidote to posttraumatic stress disorder in Rwandese genocide perpetratorsQ36108658
The Appetitive Aggression Scale-development of an instrument for the assessment of human's attraction to violenceQ36108732
Cruelty's rewards: the gratifications of perpetrators and spectatorsQ36703633
Relations among appetitive aggression, post-traumatic stress and motives for demobilization: a study in former Colombian combatantsQ36794050
Aggression inoculates against PTSD symptom severity-insights from armed groups in the eastern DR CongoQ36837477
Growing up in armed groups: trauma and aggression among child soldiers in DR CongoQ37289353
Gender and offender status predicting treatment success in refugees and asylum seekers with PTSDQ37539172
The impact of killing and injuring others on mental health symptoms among police officers.Q37683285
A meta-analytic review of prolonged exposure for posttraumatic stress disorderQ37765006
The emerging evidence for Narrative Exposure Therapy: a reviewQ37787504
Psychotherapy for military-related posttraumatic stress disorder: review of the evidenceQ38057576
Killing versus witnessing in combat trauma and reports of PTSD symptoms and domestic violenceQ38411765
Validation of a mental health assessment in an African conflict populationQ38872403
Subtypes of aggression and their relevance to child psychiatryQ41368230
Psychotherapeutic Intervention in the Demobilization Process: Addressing Combat-related Mental Injuries with Narrative Exposure in a First and Second Dissemination Stage.Q41540023
Fascination violence: on mind and brain of man huntersQ42861818
The impact of reported direct and indirect killing on mental health symptoms in Iraq war veteransQ43183125
The impact of killing in war on mental health symptoms and related functioningQ46207129
Mental health 15 years after the killings in Rwanda: imprisoned perpetrators of the genocide against the Tutsi versus a community sample of survivorsQ46329787
Appetitive aggression in former combatants--derived from the ongoing conflict in DR CongoQ46427441
Use of khat and posttraumatic stress disorder as risk factors for psychotic symptoms: a study of Somali combatantsQ50323670
Psychological symptoms as long-term consequences of war experiences.Q50562060
Mental health problems, use of mental health services, and attrition from military service after returning from deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan.Q51920790
Survival ensembles.Q51958384
Unbiased Recursive Partitioning: A Conditional Inference FrameworkQ56340213
The Replication Recipe: What makes for a convincing replication?Q57592302
Variable Importance Assessment in Regression: Linear Regression versus Random ForestQ58301014
Appetitive aggression and its relation to posttraumatic stress in Burundian ex-combatantsQ59181570
Controlling Offensive Behavior Using Narrative Exposure TherapyQ59181585
Social Status and the Desire to Resort to Violence: Using the Example of Uganda's Former Child SoldiersQ59181590
Addressing Post-traumatic Stress and Aggression by Means of Narrative Exposure: A Randomized Controlled Trial with Ex-Combatants in the Eastern DRCQ59308526
Comparison of the PTSD Symptom Scale-Interview Version and the Clinician-Administered PTSD scaleQ73852161
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P304page(s)1755
P577publication date2015-12-08
P1433published inFrontiers in PsychologyQ2794477
P1476titleViolent Offending Promotes Appetitive Aggression Rather than Posttraumatic Stress-A Replication Study with Burundian Ex-Combatants
P478volume6

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q61807196Disarming Ex-Combatants' Minds: Toward Situated Reintegration Process in Post-conflict Colombia
Q38849287Does trauma event type matter in the assessment of traumatic load?
Q41540023Psychotherapeutic Intervention in the Demobilization Process: Addressing Combat-related Mental Injuries with Narrative Exposure in a First and Second Dissemination Stage.
Q30358328Social Cognitive Training Improves Emotional Processing and Reduces Aggressive Attitudes in Ex-combatants

Search more.