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Self-control as a mechanism for controlling aggression: A study in the context of sport competition
Affiliation:1. University of Toronto, Department of Psychology, Toronto, Canada;2. Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada;3. Texas A & M University, Department of Psychology, College Station, TX, USA;4. University of Aberdeen, School of Psychology, Aberdeen, UK;1. Department of Psychology, United States;2. Center for Brain Science, Harvard University, United States;3. Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, United States;1. University of Birmingham, UK;2. Leeds Beckett University, UK;1. School of Life Sciences, Coventry University, Cox Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom;2. School of Sport, Exercise, and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, Ashby Road, Loughborough, Leicestershire, LE11 3TU, United Kingdom
Abstract:Self-control is one of the most important structures of human personality and has been linked to a wide variety of benefits for the individual, and for society. Additionally, self-control has been consistently reported, both empirically and theoretically, as a major disposition in the regulation of aggressive behavior. Taking the advantages of the sport context as a natural environment to study human aggression, this study explored the individual differences in aggressive and anti-social behaviors as function of self-control capacity and gender. Results converged to the idea that athletes with higher levels of self-control capacity seem to be better at controlling aggression, and male athletes tend to be more aggressive. These findings not only support previous laboratory findings, but also suggest the importance of the promotion of self-control capacity as a strategy to control aggression in the domain of sport.
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