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Dive into the research topics where Antonio Zuffianò is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonio Zuffianò.


Journal of Personality | 2013

The Development of Prosociality from Adolescence to Early Adulthood: The Role of Effortful Control

Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri; Concetta Pastorelli; Nancy Eisenberg; Antonio Zuffianò; Gian Vittorio Caprara

OBJECTIVEnThe present longitudinal study examined the development of self-reported prosociality (i.e., the tendency to enact prosocial behaviors) from adolescence to early adulthood and its prediction from teacher-reported effortful control (i.e., dispositional regulation) at age 13.nnnMETHODnParticipants were 573 (276 girls) Italian adolescents aged approximately 13 (Mu2009=u200912.98, SDu2009=u20090.80) at the first assessment and 21 (Mu2009=u200921.23, SDu2009=u20090.67) at the last assessment. The study used three different cohorts recruited across ten years (from 1994 to 2004) from a larger longitudinal project with a multiple-cohort design.nnnRESULTSnLatent growth curve modeling indicated that the overall level of prosociality declined until approximately age 17 with a subsequent slight rebound until age 21. Significant inter-individual variability in developmental trends of prosociality in males and females was observed. Youths effortful control was related to a lesser decline of prosociality in adolescence.nnnCONCLUSIONSnBeing able to regulate ones own emotions and behaviors in early adolescence may not only affect the tendency to behave prosocially, but also counter the self-centered tendencies observed across this phase of development.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2014

Positive Effects of Promoting Prosocial Behavior in Early Adolescence: Evidence from a School-Based Intervention.

Gian Vittorio Caprara; Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri; Maria Gerbino; Antonio Zuffianò; Guido Alessandri; Giovanni Maria Vecchio; Eva Caprara; Concetta Pastorelli; Beatrice L. Bridglall

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of a pilot school-based intervention called CEPIDEA, designed to promote prosocial behavior in early adolescence. The study took place in a middle school located in a small city near Rome. The intervention group included 151 students (52.3% males; Mage = 12.4), and the control group 173 students (50.3% females; Mage = 13.0). Both groups were assessed at three time points, each 6 months apart. A Latent Growth Curve analysis revealed that the intervention group, compared to the control group, showed an increase of helping behavior along with a decrease of physical and verbal aggression across time. Current results also showed that the increase of helping behavior mediated the decline of verbal aggression in adolescents who had attended the intervention. Participants of CEPIDEA also attained higher grades than the control group at the end of middle school. Overall, findings suggest that promoting prosocial behavior may serve to counteract aggressive conduct and enhance academic achievement during adolescence.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2016

School-Based Interventions to Promote Empathy-Related Responding in Children and Adolescents: A Developmental Analysis

Tina Malti; Maria Paula Chaparro; Antonio Zuffianò; Tyler Colasante

Empathy has been identified as a core component of social and emotional functioning across development. Various prevention and intervention programs have utilized components of empathy-related responding to promote the development of children’s and adolescents’ social-emotional functioning and impede their aggression in school contexts. In this article, we assess the effectiveness of select school-based empathy interventions and the extent to which they align with developmental theory and research. First, we review current conceptualizations of empathy-related responding, identify its components, outline its normative development, and describe the need for developmentally tailored interventions. We then identify and assess the effectiveness and developmental sensitivity of 19 school-based programs with strong empirical support that target empathy-related responding across childhood and adolescence. Although the majority of these programs showed some degree of developmental differentiation between grades, none considered developmental differences within grades. Commencing interventions earlier in development and targeting higher numbers of empathy-related constructs were, in part, associated with larger effects. We discuss how future research can bridge the gap between basic developmental research and the design of developmentally tailored interventions to promote empathy-related responding.


Journal of Adolescence | 2014

Trajectories of prosocial behavior from adolescence to early adulthood: Associations with personality change

Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri; Concetta Pastorelli; Nancy Eisenberg; Antonio Zuffianò; Valeria Castellani; Gian Vittorio Caprara

The goal of this study was to identify heterogenic longitudinal patterns of change in prosocial behavior from adolescence to early adulthood and their association with change in Big Five Factor (BFF) personality traits from adolescence until early adulthood. Participants were 573 Italian adolescents aged approximately 13 at the first assessment and 21 at the last assessment. Using growth mixture modeling, low increasing (LI; 18%), medium quadratic (MQ; 26%), and high quadratic (HQ; 54%) trajectories of prosocial behavior were distinguished. Generally, the LI trajectory group predicted an increase in Conscientiousness over time, whereas the HQ trajectory group predicted greater change in Agreeableness and Openness. In addition, positive changes in Conscientiousness, Agreeableness, and Openness between ages 13 and 21 predicted a higher probability of belonging to the HQ prosocial group. Findings support a malleable perspective on personality and identify longterm positive pathways for youths prosocial development.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2015

Why and How to Promote Adolescents’ Prosocial Behaviors: Direct, Mediated and Moderated Effects of the CEPIDEA School-Based Program

Gian Vittorio Caprara; Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri; Antonio Zuffianò; Maria Gerbino; Concetta Pastorelli

AbstractnProsocial behaviors are considered integral to intervention goals that seek to promote successful youth development. This study examines the effect of a school-based intervention program entirely designed to promote prosocial behaviors called Promoting Prosocial and Emotional Skills to Counteract Externalizing Problems in Adolescence (Italian acronym CEPIDEA). The CEPIDEA curriculum was incorporated into routine educational practices and included five major components that reflect the personal determinants of prosocial behavior during adolescence. The present study assessed 151 students (48.7xa0% female; Magexa0=xa012.4) of the intervention school and 140 students (51.2xa0% female; Magexa0=xa013.0) of the control school at three points. A multi-group latent curve analysis revealed that the intervention group, compared with the control group, showed an increase in prosocial behavior, interpersonal self-efficacy beliefs, and agreeableness along with a decrease in physical aggression above and beyond the normative developmental trend of the these variables. Participants of the intervention also obtained higher grades than the control group at the end of middle school. Moderation effects for prosocial behavior and agreeableness evidenced that those who benefited most from the intervention were those adolescents with lower normative development of prosocial behavior, low initial level of agreeableness, and high initial level of physical aggression. The results also showed that the increase of prosocial behaviors mediated the decline of verbal aggression in adolescents who had attended the intervention. These findings suggest that interventions aimed at promoting prosocial behaviors while having the potential to support positive outcomes may also counteract or redirect negative trajectories of functioning.


Journal of Personality | 2015

Reciprocal Relations Between Emotional Self‐Efficacy Beliefs and Ego‐Resiliency Across Time

Michela Milioni; Guido Alessandri; Nancy Eisenberg; Valeria Castellani; Antonio Zuffianò; Michele Vecchione; Gian Vittorio Caprara

The present study examined the longitudinal relations of adolescents self-reported ego-resiliency to their emotional self-efficacy beliefs in expressing positive emotions and in managing negative emotions as they moved into early adulthood. Participants were 239 females and 211 males with a mean age of 17 years (SDu2009=u2009.80) at T1, 19 years (SDu2009=u2009.80) at T2, 21 years (SDu2009=u2009.82) at T3, and 25 years (SDu2009=u2009.80) at T4. A four-wave cross-lagged regression model and mediational analyses were used. In a panel structural equation model controlling for the stability of the constructs, reciprocal relationships across time were found between ego-resiliency and emotional self-efficacy beliefs related to the expression of positive emotions and to the management of negative emotions. Moreover, the relation between ego-resiliency assessed at T1 and T3, and ego-resiliency assessed at T2 and T4, was mediated through emotional self-efficacy beliefs (at T2 and T3, respectively), and vice versa. The posited conceptual model accounted for a significant portion of variance in ego-resiliency and has implications for understanding the development of ego-resiliency.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2014

Prosociality During the Transition From Late Adolescence to Young Adulthood The Role of Effortful Control and Ego-Resiliency

Guido Alessandri; Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri; Nancy Eisenberg; Antonio Zuffianò; Michela Milioni; Michele Vecchione; Gian Vittorio Caprara

The present prospective study examined the prediction of prosociality from effortful control and ego-resiliency from late adolescence to emerging adulthood. Participants were 476 young adults (239 males and 237 females) with a mean age of 16 years (SD = .81) at T1, 18 years (SD = .83) at T2, 20 years (SD = .79) at T3, 22 years (SD = .81) at T4, and 26 years (SD = .81) at T5. Controlling for the stability of the examined variables and the effect of potential confounding variables (i.e., sex, socioeconomic status [SES], and age), results supported a model in which a temperamental dimension, effortful control, positively predicted a specific behavioral tendency (i.e., prosociality) indirectly through mediation by a personality factor (i.e., ego-resiliency). Practical implications of the results are discussed in terms of the importance of early prevention efforts designed to enhance the capacity to cope effectively with emotional reactions and difficult situations.


Child Development | 2016

Children's Sympathy, Guilt, and Moral Reasoning in Helping, Cooperation, and Sharing: A 6‐Year Longitudinal Study

Tina Malti; Sophia Ongley; Joanna Peplak; Maria Paula Chaparro; Marlis Buchmann; Antonio Zuffianò; Lixian Cui

This study examined the role of sympathy, guilt, and moral reasoning in helping, cooperation, and sharing in a 6-year, three-wave longitudinal study involving 175 children (Mage 6.10, 9.18, and 12.18xa0years). Primary caregivers reported on childrens helping and cooperation; sharing was assessed behaviorally. Child sympathy was assessed by self- and teacher reports, and self-attributed feelings of guilt-sadness and moral reasoning were assessed by childrens responses to transgression vignettes. Sympathy predicted helping, cooperation, and sharing. Guilt-sadness and moral reasoning interacted with sympathy in predicting helping and cooperation; both sympathy and guilt-sadness were associated with the development of sharing. The findings are discussed in relation to the emergence of differential motivational pathways to helping, cooperation, and sharing.


Self and Identity | 2016

Evaluating the temporal structure and correlates of daily self-esteem using a trait state error framework (TSE)

Guido Alessandri; Antonio Zuffianò; Michele Vecchione; Brent Donnellan; John Tisak

Abstract This study evaluates the temporal structure of daily self-esteem and the relative contribution of a range of theoretically motivated predictors of daily self-esteem. To assess self-esteem stability, a daily version of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem scale (RSE, Rosenberg, 1965) was administered to 278 undergraduates for five consecutive days. These short-term longitudinal data were analysed using the Trait State Error (TSE) modelling framework. The TSE decomposes multi-wave data into three components: (1) a stable trait component, (2) a state component, and (3) an error component. Significant predictors of the trait component of self-esteem observed across five days were: (1) emotional stability, and (2) the congruence between implicit and explicit self-esteem. Significant predictors of the state components of self-esteem were daily positive and negative events. We discuss the implications of these results for future research concerning self-esteem stability.


Journal of Personality | 2016

The Relation of Pro-Sociality to Self-Esteem:The Mediational Role of Quality of Friendships

Antonio Zuffianò; Nancy Eisenberg; Guido Alessandri; Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri; Concetta Pastorelli; Michela Milioni; Gian Vittorio Caprara

The present longitudinal study examined the role of quality of friendship in mediating the relation of pro-sociality to self-esteem over time. Participants were 424 Italian young adults (56% females) assessed at two waves (M(age)u2009=u200921.1 at Time 1; M(age)u2009=u200925 at Time 2). An autoregressive cross-lagged panel model was used to test the mediational model. Self- and friend-report measures of pro-sociality, quality of friendship, and self-esteem were included in the analyses. Results were in line with the hypothesized paths, with quality of friendship mediating the relation of pro-sociality to later self-esteem above and beyond its high stability. Self-esteem, in turn, predicted pro-sociality 4 years later. Overall, the present findings support the potential benefits of behaving pro-socially for an actor in terms of increased perceived self-worth and also expand previous work by outlining the specific mediational role of the quality of friendships. The theoretical and practical implications of these results are discussed.

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Guido Alessandri

Sapienza University of Rome

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Maria Gerbino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Michela Milioni

Sapienza University of Rome

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