Moderating effects of rumination and gender on context-specific aggression
โ Scribed by Edelyn Verona
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 157 KB
- Volume
- 31
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0096-140X
- DOI
- 10.1002/ab.20096
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Angry rumination has been linked previously to increased aggression. The effects of trait rumination on men and women's emotional and aggressive responses under different cueing contexts were examined. Aggressive behavior, not resulting from direct insult or provocation, was indexed by a laboratory paradigm that measured the intensity and the duration of shocks delivered to a putative ''employee''. Frustration about, and cognitive focus on, the employee's poor performance was manipulated through the cover story and procedures; however, half the participants were exposed to a fearful/distracting stressor (stress focused) whereas the other half were not (confederate focused). Emotional responses and evaluations of the confederate were also assessed. Results indicated that rumination enhanced the effects of context, so that it related to greater fear and sadness in the stress-focused context and to increased aggression and motives to aggress in the confederate-focused context. These effects, however, were more robust for women than men. Ruminative men tended to show more hostile behaviors and motives across both conditions. Mechanisms for the effects of rumination on aggression, and gender differences in these processes, are discussed.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The present study examined two explanations for gender differences in expression of direct and indirect aggression. The social sanction model suggests that aggressor and target gender effects may be accounted for in terms of social sanctions against behaving aggressively; indirect aggression is the
Gender, ยฎnancial hardship, low education and vulnerability to stress, were regressed on a latent dependent variable representing covariances of three mitogen tests measuring immune response in the form of lymphocyte proliferation (CON-A, PHA, and PWM). In addition to the four main effects, six inter