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The tangled webs we wreak: Examining the structure of aggressive personality using psychometric networks.


ABSTRACT:

Objective

Trait aggression is a prominent construct in the psychological literature, yet little work has sought to situate trait aggression among broader frameworks of personality. Initial evidence suggests that trait aggression may be best couched within the nomological network of the Five-Factor Model (FFM). The current work sought to locate the most appropriate home for trait aggression among the FFM.

Method

We applied a preregistered regimen of psychometric network analyses to three datasets (combined N = 2927) that contained self-reports of trait aggression and the FFM traits.

Results

Trait aggression was highly central in the factor-level networks, which contained associations consistent with the conceptualization of this construct as a lower-order component of low agreeableness. The facet-level networks revealed that the behavioral facets of trait aggression reflected low agreeableness, but that the anger and hostility facets reflected high neuroticism. The item-level network suggested that the intent to initiate aggressive encounters was the primary bridge that empirically linked trait aggression to agreeableness.

Conclusions

Our results indicate that trait aggression is primarily a lower-order facet of agreeableness, advance our understanding of trait aggression, integrate it with broader frameworks of personality, and suggest future directions to refine this complex dispositional tendency.

SUBMITTER: West SJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9203597 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The tangled webs we wreak: Examining the structure of aggressive personality using psychometric networks.

West Samuel J SJ   Chester David S DS  

Journal of personality 20220111 5


<h4>Objective</h4>Trait aggression is a prominent construct in the psychological literature, yet little work has sought to situate trait aggression among broader frameworks of personality. Initial evidence suggests that trait aggression may be best couched within the nomological network of the Five-Factor Model (FFM). The current work sought to locate the most appropriate home for trait aggression among the FFM.<h4>Method</h4>We applied a preregistered regimen of psychometric network analyses to  ...[more]

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