Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults

Research indicates that relational aggression, social aggression, and indirect aggression are important predictors and outcomes of social development (Archer & Coyne, 2005). Socially, indirectly, and relationally aggressive behaviors are utilized in order to harm an individual’s social status, r...

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Main Author: Breslend, Nicole Lafko
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks @ UVM 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/876
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1876&context=graddis
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spelling ndltd-uvm.edu-oai-scholarworks.uvm.edu-graddis-18762019-10-20T11:29:01Z Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults Breslend, Nicole Lafko Research indicates that relational aggression, social aggression, and indirect aggression are important predictors and outcomes of social development (Archer & Coyne, 2005). Socially, indirectly, and relationally aggressive behaviors are utilized in order to harm an individual’s social status, relationships, and/or social resources (Archer, & Coyne, 2005), but scholars disagree about the extent of the similarities and differences between these subtypes. Previous efforts to understand the distinction between these subtypes of aggression have been limited by how these behaviors have been operationalized and studied. The primary aim of the current study was to develop a self-report measure of these aggressive behaviors for emerging adults by utilizing factor analytic techniques to examine existing and newly created items. A series of five stages was used to code all items into existing theoretical categories of behavior (e.g., social aggression), establish the factor structure of the items, select the best items to measure each factor, test measurement invariance across subgroups (e.g., men and women), ensure strong psychometric properties, and relate the final factor structure to relevant developmental correlates (e.g., depressive symptoms). Three independent samples of emerging adults aged 18 – 29 years (49.51% –52.33% women; Mage= 25.71 - 26.26) were recruited online through Amazon’s Mechanical Turk (sample 1 N = 299; sample 2 N = 299; sample 3 N = 119). Indirect, social, and relational aggression items were selected and adapted from existing self-report measures of these constructs for adults and several new items were created from qualitative interviews with emerging adults. Through a rigorous theoretical, methodological, and statistical approach, the Relational/Social Aggression in Adulthood Measure (RSAAM) was developed. The final factor structure consisted of three factors: Ignoring, Gossip, and Relational Manipulation. The three factors demonstrated measurement invariance across gender and educational groups and strong internal consistency and test-retest reliability. Purely relationally manipulative behaviors were distinct from other, related behaviors (i.e., ignoring, gossip) and were also differentially related to developmental correlates. Findings suggest that it may be advantageous for researchers to move beyond broad theoretical definitions of relational and social aggression and instead focus on the specific aggressive behaviors being enacted. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/876 https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1876&context=graddis Graduate College Dissertations and Theses en ScholarWorks @ UVM aggression measure relational aggression social aggression Psychology
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic aggression
measure
relational aggression
social aggression
Psychology
spellingShingle aggression
measure
relational aggression
social aggression
Psychology
Breslend, Nicole Lafko
Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults
description Research indicates that relational aggression, social aggression, and indirect aggression are important predictors and outcomes of social development (Archer & Coyne, 2005). Socially, indirectly, and relationally aggressive behaviors are utilized in order to harm an individual’s social status, relationships, and/or social resources (Archer, & Coyne, 2005), but scholars disagree about the extent of the similarities and differences between these subtypes. Previous efforts to understand the distinction between these subtypes of aggression have been limited by how these behaviors have been operationalized and studied. The primary aim of the current study was to develop a self-report measure of these aggressive behaviors for emerging adults by utilizing factor analytic techniques to examine existing and newly created items. A series of five stages was used to code all items into existing theoretical categories of behavior (e.g., social aggression), establish the factor structure of the items, select the best items to measure each factor, test measurement invariance across subgroups (e.g., men and women), ensure strong psychometric properties, and relate the final factor structure to relevant developmental correlates (e.g., depressive symptoms). Three independent samples of emerging adults aged 18 – 29 years (49.51% –52.33% women; Mage= 25.71 - 26.26) were recruited online through Amazon’s Mechanical Turk (sample 1 N = 299; sample 2 N = 299; sample 3 N = 119). Indirect, social, and relational aggression items were selected and adapted from existing self-report measures of these constructs for adults and several new items were created from qualitative interviews with emerging adults. Through a rigorous theoretical, methodological, and statistical approach, the Relational/Social Aggression in Adulthood Measure (RSAAM) was developed. The final factor structure consisted of three factors: Ignoring, Gossip, and Relational Manipulation. The three factors demonstrated measurement invariance across gender and educational groups and strong internal consistency and test-retest reliability. Purely relationally manipulative behaviors were distinct from other, related behaviors (i.e., ignoring, gossip) and were also differentially related to developmental correlates. Findings suggest that it may be advantageous for researchers to move beyond broad theoretical definitions of relational and social aggression and instead focus on the specific aggressive behaviors being enacted.
author Breslend, Nicole Lafko
author_facet Breslend, Nicole Lafko
author_sort Breslend, Nicole Lafko
title Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults
title_short Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults
title_full Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults
title_fullStr Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults
title_full_unstemmed Relational, Indirect, and Social Aggression: Measure Development for Emerging Adults
title_sort relational, indirect, and social aggression: measure development for emerging adults
publisher ScholarWorks @ UVM
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/876
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1876&context=graddis
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