
pmid: 14563027
The associations of parental moral disengagement, guilt, prosocial behavior, and anger, with their children's maladaptive anger was examined. 98 college undergraduate students and their parents participated. Both students and parents completed the Anger Response Inventory, the Mechanism of Moral Disengagement Scale, the Texas Social Behavior Inventory, the Fear of Punishment Scale, and the Need for Reparation Scale. A multiple regression analysis was performed to assess the students' variables which predicted maladaptive anger. Only moral disengagement was a predictor of the students' maladaptive anger. Subsequent multiple regression analyses were used to examine whether parental variables predict students' anger. Fathers' maladaptive anger, and prosocial skills were significantly related to students' maladaptive anger. Maternal variables produced an increase in the multiple R similar to the fathers', but none of the individual measures were significantly associated with the students' maladaptive anger.
Adult, Male, Parents, Anger, Cognition, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adaptation, Psychological, Guilt, Humans, Regression Analysis, Female
Adult, Male, Parents, Anger, Cognition, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adaptation, Psychological, Guilt, Humans, Regression Analysis, Female
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