• Controlled cruelty: New study finds aggr

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Thu Jul 13 22:30:26 2023
    Controlled cruelty: New study finds aggression can arise from successful self-control

    Date:
    July 13, 2023
    Source:
    Virginia Commonwealth University
    Summary:
    A new study has found that aggression is not always the product
    of poor self-control but, instead, often can be the product of
    successful self- control in order to inflict greater retribution.


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    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    A new study by a Virginia Commonwealth University researcher has found
    that aggression is not always the product of poor self-control but,
    instead, often can be the product of successful self-control in order
    to inflict greater retribution.

    The new paper, "Aggression As Successful Self-Control," by corresponding
    author David Chester, Ph.D., an associate professor of social psychology
    in the Department of Psychology at VCU's College of Humanities and
    Sciences, was published by the journal Social and Personality Psychology Compassand uses meta-analysis to summarize evidence from dozens of
    existing studies in psychology and neurology.

    "Typically, people explain violence as the product of poor self-control," Chester said. "In the heat of the moment, we often fail to inhibit our
    worst, most aggressive impulses. But that is only one side of the story." Indeed, Chester's study found that the most aggressive people do not
    have personalities characterized by poor self-discipline and that
    training programs that boost self-control have not proved effective in
    reducing violent tendencies. Instead, the study found ample evidence
    that aggression can arise from successful self-control.

    "Vengeful people tend to exhibit greater premeditation of their behavior
    and self-control, enabling them to delay the gratification of sweet
    revenge and bide their time to inflict maximum retribution upon those
    who they believe have wronged them," Chester said. "Even psychopathic
    people, who comprise the majority of people who commit violent offenses,
    often exhibit robust development of inhibitory self-control over their
    teenage years." Aggressive behavior is reliably linked to increased
    -- not just decreased - - activity in the brain's prefrontal cortex, a biological substrate of self- control, Chester found. The findings make
    it clear that the argument that aggression is primarily the product of
    poor self-control is weaker than previously thought.

    "This paper pushes back against a decades-long dominant narrative in
    aggression research, which is that violence starts when self-control
    stops," Chester said.

    "Instead, it argues for a more balanced, nuanced view in which
    self-control can both constrain and facilitate aggression, depending on
    the person and the situation." The findings also argue for more caution
    in the implementation of treatments, therapies and interventions that
    seek to reduce violence by improving self- control, Chester said.

    "Many interventions seek to teach people to inhibit their impulses, but
    this new approach to aggression suggests that although this may reduce aggression for some people, it is also likely to increase aggression
    for others," he said.

    "Indeed, we may be teaching some people how best to implement their
    aggressive tendencies." The findings surprised Chester, a psychologist
    whose team frequently studies the causes of human aggression.

    "Over the years, much of our research was guided by the field's
    assumption that aggression is an impulsive behavior characterized by
    poor self-control," he said. "But as we started to investigate the psychological characteristics of vengeful and psychopathic people,
    we quickly realized that such aggressive individuals do not just have self-regulatory deficits; they have many psychological adaptations
    and skills that enable them to hurt others by using self-control."
    Chester and his team plan to continue exploring questions around
    aggression and self-control based on the study's findings.

    "Our research going forward is now guided by this new paradigm shift
    in thinking: that aggression is often the product of sophisticated and
    complex mental processes and not just uninhibited impulses," Chester said.

    This research was supported by a grant from the National Institute on
    Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, part of the National Institutes of Health.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Mind_&_Brain
    # Anger_Management # Behavior # Social_Psychology #
    Psychology
    o Science_&_Society
    # Popular_Culture # Poverty_and_Learning #
    Environmental_Policies # Public_Health
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Aggression o Illusion_of_control o Gross_domestic_product
    o Economic_growth o Attention-deficit_hyperactivity_disorder
    o Hypothalamus o Human_brain o Automobile_emissions_control

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    Materials provided by Virginia_Commonwealth_University. Original written
    by Mary Kate Brogan. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. David S. Chester. Aggression as successful
    self‐control. Social and
    Personality Psychology Compass, 2023; DOI: 10.1111/spc3.12832 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230713141930.htm

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