Champion Kelly M, Clay Daniel L
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Child Development and Family Studies Research Center, Arizona State University at the West Campus, PO Box 37100, Phoenix, AZ 85308-7100, USA.
Child Psychiatry Hum Dev. 2007 Feb;37(3):205-20. doi: 10.1007/s10578-006-0030-9.
This study examined associations between victimization by peers and intention to respond to provocative events as a function of anger arousal and motivation to improve the situation in a cross-sectional sample of school-age children (N = 506, 260 males, 246 females). Results demonstrated that more intense anger and more retaliatory motivation were positively associated with intentions to aggress and with frequency of victimization. The association between aggressive intentions to respond to anger provocation and victimization could be accounted for by subjective feelings of anger and motivation to retaliate. The contribution of emotion processes was stronger for boys than for girls. A post hoc examination of non-bullying participants revealed that motivation accounted for aggressive intentions among the non-bullies. Results support including anger management programs in prevention efforts that target the school climate and victims' risk for psychopathology.
本研究在一个学龄儿童横断面样本(N = 506,男260名,女246名)中,考察了同伴侵害与应对挑衅事件意图之间的关联,这些关联是愤怒唤起和改善情境动机的函数。结果表明,更强烈的愤怒和更强的报复动机与攻击意图及受侵害频率呈正相关。对愤怒挑衅做出攻击性回应的意图与受侵害之间的关联可由愤怒的主观感受和报复动机来解释。情绪过程对男孩的影响比对女孩更强。对非霸凌参与者的事后检验表明,动机解释了非霸凌者的攻击意图。研究结果支持在针对学校氛围和受害者心理病理学风险的预防工作中纳入愤怒管理项目。