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Is narcissism associated with child physical abuse risk?

Is narcissism associated with child physical abuse risk?
Is narcissism associated with child physical abuse risk?

The present study was designed to clarify the associations between covert narcissism, overt narcissism, negative affect, and child physical abuse (CPA) risk. It was hypothesized that covert (but not overt narcissism) would be significantly associated with parental CPA risk and that negative affect would partially mediate this association. General population parents (N = 178; 33 % male) with varying degrees of CPA risk completed self-report measures of covert narcissism, overt narcissism, and negative affect. Results revealed that at the bivariate level, covert narcissism and two subscales of the overt narcissism measure (exploitativeness and entitlement) were significantly correlated with CPA risk. However, when covert narcissism and overt narcissism were considered simultaneously in a regression analysis, only covert narcissism emerged as a significant predictor of CPA risk. Results of a path analysis supported the prediction that negative affect partially mediated the association between covert narcissism and CPA risk. Findings from the present study illustrate the value of assessing both overt and covert narcissistic features in research investigating the role of narcissism in interpersonal violence. Moreover, the results revealed that covert narcissism was associated with CPA risk, even after accounting for their mutual associations with negative affect. Additional research is needed to explicate the other cognitive/affective mechanisms through which covert narcissism increases risk of aggressive parenting behavior.

Aggression, Child abuse, Maltreatment, Parenting, Personality
0885-7482
373-380
Crouch, Julie L.
9a7bddd0-ee4f-4dc0-ba1c-1a7a7ec3ee83
Hiraoka, Regina
f385dba5-c684-4328-a67b-39ebe66591cc
Rutledge, Ericka
64422561-be45-4263-aaf6-751ce6c51ebe
Zengel, Bettina
9d343ec9-7b10-45e3-b818-41287d9c4bd5
Skowronski, John J.
47eb23aa-177b-4634-b986-5b935998bf6b
Milner, Joel S.
ffe087c5-2ea5-47b7-846f-9709ce0e1d3f
Crouch, Julie L.
9a7bddd0-ee4f-4dc0-ba1c-1a7a7ec3ee83
Hiraoka, Regina
f385dba5-c684-4328-a67b-39ebe66591cc
Rutledge, Ericka
64422561-be45-4263-aaf6-751ce6c51ebe
Zengel, Bettina
9d343ec9-7b10-45e3-b818-41287d9c4bd5
Skowronski, John J.
47eb23aa-177b-4634-b986-5b935998bf6b
Milner, Joel S.
ffe087c5-2ea5-47b7-846f-9709ce0e1d3f

Crouch, Julie L., Hiraoka, Regina, Rutledge, Ericka, Zengel, Bettina, Skowronski, John J. and Milner, Joel S. (2015) Is narcissism associated with child physical abuse risk? Journal of Family Violence, 30 (3), 373-380. (doi:10.1007/s10896-015-9672-3).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The present study was designed to clarify the associations between covert narcissism, overt narcissism, negative affect, and child physical abuse (CPA) risk. It was hypothesized that covert (but not overt narcissism) would be significantly associated with parental CPA risk and that negative affect would partially mediate this association. General population parents (N = 178; 33 % male) with varying degrees of CPA risk completed self-report measures of covert narcissism, overt narcissism, and negative affect. Results revealed that at the bivariate level, covert narcissism and two subscales of the overt narcissism measure (exploitativeness and entitlement) were significantly correlated with CPA risk. However, when covert narcissism and overt narcissism were considered simultaneously in a regression analysis, only covert narcissism emerged as a significant predictor of CPA risk. Results of a path analysis supported the prediction that negative affect partially mediated the association between covert narcissism and CPA risk. Findings from the present study illustrate the value of assessing both overt and covert narcissistic features in research investigating the role of narcissism in interpersonal violence. Moreover, the results revealed that covert narcissism was associated with CPA risk, even after accounting for their mutual associations with negative affect. Additional research is needed to explicate the other cognitive/affective mechanisms through which covert narcissism increases risk of aggressive parenting behavior.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 12 February 2015
Published date: April 2015
Keywords: Aggression, Child abuse, Maltreatment, Parenting, Personality

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413075
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413075
ISSN: 0885-7482
PURE UUID: 8e33133f-fb8e-43a7-96a6-83109fbdfa64
ORCID for Bettina Zengel: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0871-3158

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 14 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 12:26

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Contributors

Author: Julie L. Crouch
Author: Regina Hiraoka
Author: Ericka Rutledge
Author: Bettina Zengel ORCID iD
Author: John J. Skowronski
Author: Joel S. Milner

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