Emotion Recognition and Perceived Social Support in Young People Who Offend

IF 1.9 4区 社会学 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Youth Justice-An International Journal Pub Date : 2020-06-13 DOI:10.1177/1473225420931189
M. Wilcox, N. Frude, L. Andrew
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Abstract

Young people who offend appear stuck in a cycle of adverse experiences, low levels of social support and emotional skill deficits. Yet these factors have not been extensively researched with young people who offend. The current study aimed to develop the understanding of emotion recognition ability and perceived social support in young people who offend and to explore the relationship between these variables. A total of 50 young people who offend were recruited through three Youth Offending Teams and 50 age, gender, ethnicity, socio-economic status and academically matched young people without a known offending history were recruited from a college and youth service in the same geographical area. All participants completed a demographic questionnaire, the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, a Facial Emotion Recognition Task, a Verbal Emotional Prosody Recognition Task and the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support. Failing to support the hypotheses, statistical analyses failed to show that, relative to the controls, young people who offend had significantly higher levels of alexithymia, lower levels of perceived social support or lower ability to recognise others’ emotions. However, relative to the controls, young people who offend did show significantly lower ability to recognise fear through verbal prosody. Of particular interest, looked after status, which was more commonly reported among young people who offend (38%) than controls (4%), was the predominant factor associated with all outcome variables. Thus looked after status, rather than offending status in isolation, is more associated with difficulties in identifying and describing feelings, ability to recognise others’ emotions and levels of perceived social support. In addition, significant correlations were found between (1) alexithymia and perceived social support, (2) the ability to recognise others’ emotions and perceived social support and (3) the ability to recognise emotions from facial expressions and verbal prosody. Theoretical and clinical implications of the study findings are discussed and areas for future research are suggested.
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青少年犯罪的情绪认知与感知社会支持
冒犯他人的年轻人似乎陷入了不良经历、社会支持水平低和情感技能缺陷的循环中。然而,这些因素并没有被广泛研究与年轻人谁冒犯。本研究旨在加深对冒犯年轻人的情绪识别能力和感知社会支持的理解,并探讨这些变量之间的关系。共有50名犯罪青年通过三个青年犯罪小组招募,50名年龄、性别、种族、社会经济地位和学业匹配的、没有已知犯罪史的青年从同一地理区域的大学和青年服务机构招募。所有参与者都完成了一份人口统计问卷、多伦多述情障碍量表、面部情绪识别任务、言语情感韵律识别任务和感知社会支持多维量表。统计分析未能支持这些假设,也未能表明,与对照组相比,冒犯的年轻人的述情障碍水平明显更高,感知到的社会支持水平更低,或识别他人情绪的能力更低。然而,与对照组相比,冒犯的年轻人通过言语韵律识别恐惧的能力确实明显较低。特别令人感兴趣的是,照顾状况是与所有结果变量相关的主要因素,在冒犯的年轻人中(38%)比对照组(4%)更常见。因此,被照顾的状态,而不是孤立的冒犯状态,更多地与识别和描述感受的困难、识别他人情绪的能力和感知到的社会支持水平有关。此外,还发现(1)述情障碍与感知到的社会支持之间存在显著相关性,(2)识别他人情绪和感知到的社交支持的能力,以及(3)从面部表情和言语韵律中识别情绪的能力。讨论了研究结果的理论和临床意义,并提出了未来研究的领域。
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来源期刊
Youth Justice-An International Journal
Youth Justice-An International Journal CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Youth Justice is an international, peer-reviewed journal that engages with the analyses of juvenile/youth justice systems, law, policy and practice around the world. It contains articles that are theoretically informed and/or grounded in the latest empirical research. Youth Justice has established itself as the leading journal in the field in the UK, and, supported by an editorial board comprising some of the world"s leading youth justice scholars.
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