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The impact of rumination on aggressive thoughts, feelings, arousal, and behaviour

The impact of rumination on aggressive thoughts, feelings, arousal, and behaviour
The impact of rumination on aggressive thoughts, feelings, arousal, and behaviour
Although rumination following a provocation can increase aggression, no research has examined the processes responsible for this phenomenon. With predictions derived from the General Aggression Model, three experiments explored the impact of two types of post‐provocation rumination on the processes whereby rumination augments aggression. In Experiment 1, relative to distraction, self‐focused rumination uniquely increased the accessibility of arousal cognition, whereas provocation‐focused rumination uniquely amplified the accessibility of aggressive action cognition. In Experiment 2, provocation‐focused rumination uniquely increased systolic blood pressure. In Experiment 3, both types of rumination increased aggressive behaviour relative to a distraction condition. Angry affect partially mediated the effects of both provocation‐ and self‐focused rumination on aggression. Self‐critical negative affect partially mediated the effect of self‐focused rumination but not provocation‐focused rumination. These findings suggest that provocation‐focused rumination influences angry affect, aggressive action cognition, and cardiovascular arousal, whereas self‐focused rumination increases self‐critical negative affect, angry affect, and arousal cognition. These studies enhance our understanding of why two types of post‐provocation rumination increase aggressive behaviour.
0144-6665
281-301
Pedersen, William
0eb84224-9699-472a-8e0d-4391c539e9b8
Denson, Thomas
60240619-eb88-48fe-9f24-f11fc266f32b
Goss, Justin
965ff2e6-dd6a-42f3-afc1-42dd2ef024d0
Vasquez, Eduardo
adcef825-99c8-40cf-b1f3-b8293c323910
Kelley, Nicholas
445e767b-ad9f-44f2-b2c6-d981482bb90b
Miller, Norman
08a4d623-a5c3-49a4-a94a-95d6388e1ae3
Pedersen, William
0eb84224-9699-472a-8e0d-4391c539e9b8
Denson, Thomas
60240619-eb88-48fe-9f24-f11fc266f32b
Goss, Justin
965ff2e6-dd6a-42f3-afc1-42dd2ef024d0
Vasquez, Eduardo
adcef825-99c8-40cf-b1f3-b8293c323910
Kelley, Nicholas
445e767b-ad9f-44f2-b2c6-d981482bb90b
Miller, Norman
08a4d623-a5c3-49a4-a94a-95d6388e1ae3

Pedersen, William, Denson, Thomas, Goss, Justin, Vasquez, Eduardo, Kelley, Nicholas and Miller, Norman (2011) The impact of rumination on aggressive thoughts, feelings, arousal, and behaviour. British Journal of Social Psychology, 50 (2), 281-301. (doi:10.1348/014466610X515696).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Although rumination following a provocation can increase aggression, no research has examined the processes responsible for this phenomenon. With predictions derived from the General Aggression Model, three experiments explored the impact of two types of post‐provocation rumination on the processes whereby rumination augments aggression. In Experiment 1, relative to distraction, self‐focused rumination uniquely increased the accessibility of arousal cognition, whereas provocation‐focused rumination uniquely amplified the accessibility of aggressive action cognition. In Experiment 2, provocation‐focused rumination uniquely increased systolic blood pressure. In Experiment 3, both types of rumination increased aggressive behaviour relative to a distraction condition. Angry affect partially mediated the effects of both provocation‐ and self‐focused rumination on aggression. Self‐critical negative affect partially mediated the effect of self‐focused rumination but not provocation‐focused rumination. These findings suggest that provocation‐focused rumination influences angry affect, aggressive action cognition, and cardiovascular arousal, whereas self‐focused rumination increases self‐critical negative affect, angry affect, and arousal cognition. These studies enhance our understanding of why two types of post‐provocation rumination increase aggressive behaviour.

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Published date: June 2011

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 432930
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432930
ISSN: 0144-6665
PURE UUID: f5cb7f26-bb7f-4e5c-8f4f-5cb441d642a4
ORCID for Nicholas Kelley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2256-0597

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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:41

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Contributors

Author: William Pedersen
Author: Thomas Denson
Author: Justin Goss
Author: Eduardo Vasquez
Author: Nicholas Kelley ORCID iD
Author: Norman Miller

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