The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity

<p> Research demonstrates that cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) predicts hypertension and contributes to the development of cardiovascular disease. Furthermore, social support can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. People with high levels of trait displaced aggression (TDA) aggress agai...

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Main Author: Matthews, Laura K.
Language:EN
Published: California State University, Long Beach 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10173999
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-101739992016-12-22T15:57:47Z The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity Matthews, Laura K. Social psychology|Personality psychology <p> Research demonstrates that cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) predicts hypertension and contributes to the development of cardiovascular disease. Furthermore, social support can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. People with high levels of trait displaced aggression (TDA) aggress against innocent individuals, such as family and friends, thus pushing away important sources of social support. The current study was the first to manipulate social support and look at the interaction of TDA, provocation, and social support on CVR and displaced aggression. Contrary to expectations, social support did not moderate the effect of TDA on either systolic blood pressure (SBP) or displaced aggression. However, among provoked participants, those who received social support displayed significantly less displaced aggression than those in the no social support or no interaction control conditions. Implications of these findings for reducing aggression are discussed.</p> California State University, Long Beach 2016-12-17 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10173999 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Social psychology|Personality psychology
spellingShingle Social psychology|Personality psychology
Matthews, Laura K.
The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity
description <p> Research demonstrates that cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) predicts hypertension and contributes to the development of cardiovascular disease. Furthermore, social support can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. People with high levels of trait displaced aggression (TDA) aggress against innocent individuals, such as family and friends, thus pushing away important sources of social support. The current study was the first to manipulate social support and look at the interaction of TDA, provocation, and social support on CVR and displaced aggression. Contrary to expectations, social support did not moderate the effect of TDA on either systolic blood pressure (SBP) or displaced aggression. However, among provoked participants, those who received social support displayed significantly less displaced aggression than those in the no social support or no interaction control conditions. Implications of these findings for reducing aggression are discussed.</p>
author Matthews, Laura K.
author_facet Matthews, Laura K.
author_sort Matthews, Laura K.
title The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity
title_short The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity
title_full The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity
title_fullStr The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity
title_full_unstemmed The impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity
title_sort impact of trait displaced aggression and social support on cardiovascular reactivity
publisher California State University, Long Beach
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10173999
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