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Implicit Coping Styles as a Predictor of Aggression
Authors:Chassitty N. Whitman  William H. Gottdiener
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, NY, USAChassitty.whitman@jjay.cuny.edu;3. Department of Psychology, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, NY, USA
Abstract:Research exploring potential antecedents of aggression provides contradictory results, with some data relating adaptive coping styles with high aggression and other studies finding the inverse. Clarification of these relationships could improve intervention and prevention strategies. This study investigated relationships between aggression and 3 coping styles (adaptive, neurotic, and maladaptive) via cross-sectional correlational methodology (N = 355). Data supported both hypotheses: First, the use of less adaptive coping styles predicted higher levels of aggression; second, this relationship held true for both cognitive (anger and hostility) and overt (physical and verbal) expressions of aggression. Results indicate that maladaptive coping significantly predicts aggression. Implications include potential prediction and prevention strategies to reduce the probability of higher risk individuals exhibiting aggression.
Keywords:aggression  aggression prevention  coping styles  personality
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