RT Article T1 It is Written in Your Eyes: Hostile Attributions and Self-Directed Gaze Perception in Incarcerated Violent Adolescent Male Offenders JF International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology VO 62 IS 12 SP 3623 OP 3638 A1 Karadenizova, Zhana M. A1 Dahle, Klaus-Peter 1960- A2 Dahle, Klaus-Peter 1960- LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1663279292 AB To date, we have frugal knowledge about the hostile attribution bias (HAB) and the biased gaze perception in violent adolescent offenders. This however is a major contributing factor in understanding delinquent behavior. Using a computer-based approach, presenting faces modulated in gaze direction (0°, 2°, 4°, 6°, 8°) and valence (angry, fearful, happy, neutral), the present study examined the impact of HAB of the feeling of being stared at in a sample of 27 adolescent offenders (aged 17-24 years). The study was conducted institution-intern in the Department for Social Therapy of a German correctional facility. Results showed that in comparison with faces with negative expressions, happy faces were more likely to be perceived as self-directed. Interestingly, emotion showed significant influence of the gaze perception in only two viewing angles (2° and 6°), revealing the role of the facial expression in highly ambiguous conditions. Furthermore, hostility did not modulate the relationship between the self-referential gaze perception and (negative) facial expression. Possible frameworks and limitations of the study are discussed. K1 Aggression K1 Hostile attribution bias K1 Emotion K1 Self-directed gaze perception K1 Juvenile delinquency K1 HAB K1 Jugenddelinquenz K1 Jugendkriminalität K1 Selbstwahrnehmung DO 10.1177/0306624X17746292