Effects of personal relative deprivation on the relationship between anger rumination and aggression during and after the COVID‐19 pandemic lockdown: A longitudinal moderated network approach

Author:

Tao Yanqiang12ORCID,Niu Haiqun3ORCID,Li Yue4,Liu Xueting5,Wang Shujian12ORCID,Ma Zijuan6ORCID,Hou Wenxin12ORCID,Liu Xiangping12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology Beijing Normal University Beijing China

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Applied Experimental Psychology National Demonstration Center for Experimental Psychology Education Beijing China

3. School of Psychology Nanjing Normal University Nanjing China

4. Faculty of Arts Shenzhen University Shenzhen China

5. Department of Student Affairs Management Mudanjiang Normal University Mudanjiang China

6. School of Psychology South China Normal University Guangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionSeveral studies have demonstrated a directional link between rage rumination and aggression. However, recent research suggests that this relationship is bidirectional. The current study examined the complex relationships between anger rumination and aggression using a moderated network approach in a longitudinal design while considering personal relative deprivation.MethodA total of 665 participants (59.25% female, agemean±SD = 19.01 ± 1.25) were enrolled at two‐time points. Assessments included self‐report measures of the Anger Rumination Scale, Buss‐Perry Aggression Questionnaire, and Relative Deprivation Scale. A Moderated Network Model (MMN) was used to test the complex links among anger rumination, aggression, and personal relative deprivation.ResultsThe analysis revealed that the link between anger rumination and aggression was complex and bidirectional. Notably, as the level of personal relative deprivation increased, verbal aggression had a positive conditional effect on anger afterthoughts in Wave 2, and thoughts of revenge had a positive conditional effect on verbal aggression in Wave 2. Moreover, as the first discovery, anger afterthoughts and anger had a negative conditional effect on each other across levels of personal relative deprivation in Wave 2. In addition, network comparison indicates that the MNMs structure was significantly different across timepoints, implying that anger rumination and aggression were inextricably linked in college students during isolation and that this complicated relationship was weakened after isolation.ConclusionsThis study deepens our understanding of the bidirectional relationships between anger rumination and aggression and recognizes the moderating role of personal relative deprivation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Social Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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