Social Information Processing and adults’ aggressive behavior: Cognitive Correlates of Reactive and Proactive Aggression Across Sex
Social Information Processing and adults’ aggressive behavior: Cognitive Correlates of Reactive and Proactive Aggression Across Sex
Mariana Sebastião Machado Josefina Castro Carla Sofia Cardoso a School of Criminology, Faculty of Law, University of Porto, Portugalb Lusíada University of Porto, Portugalc CIJ – Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Justice, Portugald CEJEIA – Center for Legal, Economic, International, and Environmental Studies, PortugalMariana Sebastião Machado, holds a PhD in Criminology. Her main research interests include understanding aggressive, deviant, and delinquent behaviours across different contexts and populations, as well as the role of cognitive and social processes in explaining these phenomena. In this context, she has developed intervention work with children through the implementation of early universal prevention programmes targeting delinquent behaviours. Alongside her research activity, Mariana Sebastião Machado is a member of the teaching staff at the School of Criminology of the Faculty of Law of the University of Porto and at the Faculty of Law of the Lusíada University – Porto.Josefina Castro, holds a Master’s degree in Criminology from the Faculty of Law of the University of Porto (FDUP) and a degree in Psychology from the same institution. She is a member of the teaching staff at the Faculty of Law of the Lusíada University – Porto, where she lectures on the undergraduate programme in Criminology. Her main research areas include juvenile justice, developmental criminology, security governance, and restorative justice.Carla Sofia Cardoso, is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law of the University of Porto (FDUP), where she teaches across all three cycles of study in Criminology. Her main research interests include experimental and laboratory criminology, biosocial and developmental criminology, urban security, and policing.