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Executive Dysfunction: A Contributor To Subtypes Of Violence Or General Criminality?, Megan B. Hancock
Executive Dysfunction: A Contributor To Subtypes Of Violence Or General Criminality?, Megan B. Hancock
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
Purpose: The adverse consequences of violence on society are tremendous. Several factors have been identified as potential contributors to violent crime, including deficits in executive functioning. Executive functioning is a term used to a describe number of higher-order cognitive abilities (e.g., working memory, inhibition) that are thought to be essential for appropriate, socially desirable behavior. The extent to which executive functions influence the occurrence of general criminality versus specific subtypes of crime is largely unknown. Of particular interest is the ability of executive functioning to distinguish between reactive and instrumental subtypes of violence. Whereas reactive violence is committed with the …