“…In addition, belief in corporal punishment (Ahn, 2004 [Korean/South Korea]), more use of power assertion and less use of instructional discipline techniques (de Paúl, Asla, et al, 2006 [Spanish/Spain]), and more use of harsh discipline (Dolz, Cerezo, & Milner, 1997 [Spanish/Spain]; Montes et al, 2001 [Spanish/Spain]) were associated with elevated scores on translated versions of the Abuse scale. Similarly, more intense aggression in the presence of victim pain cues (i.e., feedback of a victim's pain level following the administration of a shock by the study participant; Pérez-Albéniz & de Paúl, 2005a [Spanish/Spain]), more aggression in the presence of mitigating information (de Paúl, Pérez-Albéniz, Ormaechea, Vergara, & de Cádiz, 2006 [Spanish/Spain]), more aggression overall (Pérez-Albéniz & de Paúl, 2005a, 2006 [Spanish/Spain]), less adaptive responses to infants' difficult behaviors (Cerezo, Trenado, & Pons-Salvador, 2006 [Spanish/Spain]), less dispositional empathy (de Paúl et al, 2008 [Spanish/Spain]; Pérez-Albéniz & de Paúl, 2003, 2004 [Spanish/Spain]), less general empathy (Pérez-Albéniz & de Paúl, 2005b [Spanish/Spain]), less empathy toward children (Pérez-Albéniz & de Paúl, 2004 [Spanish/Spain]), and less frequent use of positive parenting techniques (Dolz et al, 1997 [Spanish/Spain]) were associated with elevated scores on the Abuse scale.…”