Sammanfattning
This study had three primary goals: to explore the relationship between narcissism, participant roles, and aggression; to examine the role of gender as a moderating influence on narcissism-based aggression; and to examine how these variables work together to influence aggressive outcomes in a sample of aggressive middle and high school students. Narcissism and aggresion appear to be similarly related for males and females; however, when examining high aggression males and high aggression females, we found that males were more influenced by leadership and authority aspects of narcissism and females were more influenced by self-absorption/self-admiration aspects of narcissism. Participants break down into three primary groups: perpetrators, helpers, and bystanders. For both genders, being a helper (either as help-seeker or defender) is positively correlated with exploitiveness.
Originalspråk | Odefinierat/okänt |
---|---|
Sidor (från-till) | 138–156 |
Tidskrift | Behavioral disorders |
Volym | 40 |
Nummer | 2 |
Status | Publicerad - 2015 |
MoE-publikationstyp | A1 Tidskriftsartikel-refererad |
Nyckelord
- psychopathology
- aggression
- self-esteem
- participant roles