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The personality basis of aggression: The mediating role of anger and the moderating role of emotional intelligence
Authors:Esperanza García‐Sancho  Kristof Dhont  José M Salguero  Pablo Fernández‐Berrocal
Institution:1. Department of Basic Psychology, University of Malaga, Spain;2. School of Psychology, University of Kent, United Kingdom;3. Department of Personality, Evaluation and Psychological Treatment, University of Malaga, Spain
Abstract:High neuroticism and low agreeableness have been found to predict higher levels of aggression through an increase of negative emotions such as anger. However, previous research has only investigated these indirect associations for physical aggression, whereas evidence for such indirect effects on other types of aggression (i.e., verbal or indirect aggression) is currently lacking. Moreover, no previous work has investigated the moderating role of Ability Emotional Intelligence (AEI), which may buffer against the effects of anger on aggression. The present study (N = 665) directly addresses these gaps in the literature. The results demonstrate that high neuroticism and low agreeableness were indirectly related to higher levels of physical, verbal, and indirect aggression via increased chronic accessibility to anger. Importantly however, the associations with physical aggression were significantly weaker for those higher (vs. lower) on AEI, confirming the buffering role of AEI. We discuss the implications of our findings for theoretical frameworks aiming to understand and reduce aggression and violent behavior.
Keywords:Aggression  neuroticism  agreeableness  personality  anger  emotional intelligence
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