“…Young children who are less able to voluntarily shift their attention and inhibit their impulses have higher levels of aggressioñ Rothbart, Ahadi, & Hershey, 1994!. In contrast, children with good attentional control are able to shift attention away from angerinducing cues, use nonhostile verbal methods, and function more appropriately in conflict situations~Eisenberg et al, 1997;Eisenberg, Fabes, Nyman, Bernzweig, & Pinuelas, 1994!. Inhibitory control contributes to the development of conscience in young school-aged children~Kochanska, Murray, & Coy, 1997!, and children's self-control fosters a sense of responsibility for their actions~Derryberry & Reed, 1996!. In these and related studies, behavior regulation and emotion regulation are considered extensions of a more fundamental capacity for executive or "effortful" control Rothbart, 1998, 2000!, anddecrements in this regulatory capacity are thought to be responsible for aggressive behavior problems~see Hill, 2002, for a review!.…”