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The Influence of Sex, Gender, Self-Discrepancies, and Self-Awareness on Anger and Verbal Aggressiveness Among U.S. College Students
64
Citations
72
References
2001
Year
Verbal AggressivenessAffective VariableSocial PsychologyIndividual DifferencesPrivate Self-awarenessSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologyEmotional ResponseEmotion RegulationGender StudiesU.s. College StudentsBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologyBehavior CharacteristicPersonality PsychologyPsychological ViolencePublic Self-awarenessEmotionAggression
Among a sample of 445 U.S. college students, the authors examined the extent to which individual differences (e.g., sex, gender, self-discrepancies, self-awareness) explained anger tendencies and verbal aggressiveness. Regression analyses showed that (a) the tendency to repress anger (anger-in) was explained by masculinity, desire to be masculine, and public self-awareness, R2 = .19, F(11, 433) = 8.44, p < .001; (b) the tendency to express anger (anger-out) was explained by sex, masculinity, and public self-awareness, R2 = .17, F(11, 433) = 7.38, p < .001; and (c) willingness to be verbally aggressive was explained by sex, femininity, and private self-awareness, R2 = .32, F(11, 433) = 16.94, p < .001. In addition, different types of individual difference variables accounted for anger tendencies and verbal aggressiveness across sex and gender categories, suggesting that anger and verbal aggressiveness may be driven by different psychological processes across types of participants.
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