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Moral disengagement moderates the predicted effect of trait self‐control on self‐reported aggression
Authors:Jian‐Bin Li  Yan‐Gang Nie  Ian D. Boardley  Qiao‐Min Situ  Kai Dou
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Guangzhou University;2. Psychological and Behavioral Research Center of Cantonese, Guangzhou University;3. School of Sport, Exercise, & Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, , Birmingham, UK;4. Business College, Guangzhou Vocational of Technology and Business, Jinan University, , Guangzhou, China;5. School of Management, Jinan University, , Guangzhou, China
Abstract:An increasing number of studies reveal that self‐control is an important preventative factor for aggression. However, the involvement of potential explanatory variables has received less research attention. Drawing upon the feedback‐loop model of self‐control, the current research assumed that the preventing effect of trait self‐control on aggression may be moderated by moral disengagement. Self‐reported measures of trait self‐control, moral disengagement and aggression were administered to 946 Chinese university students. Results show that trait self‐control had a negative effect on physical aggression, verbal aggression, anger and hostility, whereas moral disengagement positively predicted each of these constructs. Of particular importance was a significant interaction between trait self‐control and moral disengagement for verbal aggression and hostility. Specifically, the preventing effect of trait self‐control on these two types of aggression was more pronounced in individuals with low rather than high moral disengagement. In conclusion, low conditional endorsement of transgressive acts and having high trait self‐control are both important individual‐difference variables that explain reduced aggression.
Keywords:aggression  feedback‐loop model of self‐control  moral disengagement  trait self‐control
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