Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression

Aggression has been demonstrated to pose a serious threat to the adaptive development of youth, with decades of research demonstrating the negative associations between aggression and other problem behaviors, both concurrently and predictively. However, despite this body of research, the current psy...

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Main Author: Helms, Sarah W.
Format: Others
Published: VCU Scholars Compass 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1502
http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2501&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-25012017-03-17T08:30:01Z Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression Helms, Sarah W. Aggression has been demonstrated to pose a serious threat to the adaptive development of youth, with decades of research demonstrating the negative associations between aggression and other problem behaviors, both concurrently and predictively. However, despite this body of research, the current psychological literature continues to suffer from a lack of an overarching organizational framework from which to structure the construct(s) of aggression. Furthermore, existing discrepancies across the literature, particularly in the definitions of and outcomes associated with non-physical forms of aggression (e.g., relational aggression, social aggression), exacerbate the complexities facing prevention and intervention specialists. Insofar as research can isolate the unique subtypes of aggressive behaviors that best predict maladjustment outcomes, researchers can focus resources and efforts on those subtypes of aggression identified as being particularly relevant for prevention efforts. To this end, the purpose of the current study was to develop a measure that encompassed the structure of physical and relational aggression and to test competing structures of aggression based on the hypothesized relevant dimensions of mechanism of action (i.e., confrontational action vs. nonconfrontational action) and vehicle of harm (i.e., physical harm vs. relational/social harm) using confirmatory factor analyses. Additionally, this study examined relations between aggression subtypes and hypothesized correlates, including peer deviancy, delinquency, drug use, and social intelligence. Further, this study assessed both the factor structures and unique relations among aggression and its correlates separately for boys and girls, and identified unique structure and relations by gender. Participants included an urban, predominantly African American sample of 280 youth ages eleven through seventeen, who were sampled from an ongoing longitudinal study of violence, substance use, stress, and coping. As hypothesized, the mechanism of action and vehicle of harm dimensions did represent relevant conceptual distinctions in the structure of aggression. Although models did not reach objective standards for goodness of fit criteria, comparatively, the mechanism of action model best represented the structure of aggression for boys, whereas the vehicle of harm model best represented the structure of aggression for girls. Both boys and girls had significant positive correlations among their respective subtypes of aggression and other indicators of maladjustment, including peer deviancy, delinquency, and drug use. Overall, these findings confirm that structures of aggression tested were problematic for urban African-American youth, and suggest that further attention should be paid to disentangling those aspects of aggression that might be most relevant for addressing prevention and intervention efforts. 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1502 http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2501&context=etd © The Author Theses and Dissertations VCU Scholars Compass social environment adolescent risk-taking behavior stress emotional development confrontation Psychology Social and Behavioral Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic social environment
adolescent
risk-taking behavior
stress
emotional development
confrontation
Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle social environment
adolescent
risk-taking behavior
stress
emotional development
confrontation
Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Helms, Sarah W.
Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression
description Aggression has been demonstrated to pose a serious threat to the adaptive development of youth, with decades of research demonstrating the negative associations between aggression and other problem behaviors, both concurrently and predictively. However, despite this body of research, the current psychological literature continues to suffer from a lack of an overarching organizational framework from which to structure the construct(s) of aggression. Furthermore, existing discrepancies across the literature, particularly in the definitions of and outcomes associated with non-physical forms of aggression (e.g., relational aggression, social aggression), exacerbate the complexities facing prevention and intervention specialists. Insofar as research can isolate the unique subtypes of aggressive behaviors that best predict maladjustment outcomes, researchers can focus resources and efforts on those subtypes of aggression identified as being particularly relevant for prevention efforts. To this end, the purpose of the current study was to develop a measure that encompassed the structure of physical and relational aggression and to test competing structures of aggression based on the hypothesized relevant dimensions of mechanism of action (i.e., confrontational action vs. nonconfrontational action) and vehicle of harm (i.e., physical harm vs. relational/social harm) using confirmatory factor analyses. Additionally, this study examined relations between aggression subtypes and hypothesized correlates, including peer deviancy, delinquency, drug use, and social intelligence. Further, this study assessed both the factor structures and unique relations among aggression and its correlates separately for boys and girls, and identified unique structure and relations by gender. Participants included an urban, predominantly African American sample of 280 youth ages eleven through seventeen, who were sampled from an ongoing longitudinal study of violence, substance use, stress, and coping. As hypothesized, the mechanism of action and vehicle of harm dimensions did represent relevant conceptual distinctions in the structure of aggression. Although models did not reach objective standards for goodness of fit criteria, comparatively, the mechanism of action model best represented the structure of aggression for boys, whereas the vehicle of harm model best represented the structure of aggression for girls. Both boys and girls had significant positive correlations among their respective subtypes of aggression and other indicators of maladjustment, including peer deviancy, delinquency, and drug use. Overall, these findings confirm that structures of aggression tested were problematic for urban African-American youth, and suggest that further attention should be paid to disentangling those aspects of aggression that might be most relevant for addressing prevention and intervention efforts.
author Helms, Sarah W.
author_facet Helms, Sarah W.
author_sort Helms, Sarah W.
title Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression
title_short Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression
title_full Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression
title_fullStr Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression
title_full_unstemmed Structure of Aggression among Urban Youth: Competing Factor Models of Subtypes of Physical and Relational Aggression
title_sort structure of aggression among urban youth: competing factor models of subtypes of physical and relational aggression
publisher VCU Scholars Compass
publishDate 2007
url http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1502
http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2501&context=etd
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