Gender differences in aggression as a function of provocation: a meta-analysis.
- B. Bettencourt, N. Miller
- PsychologyPsychological bulletin
- 1 May 1996
The results support a social role analysis of gender differences in aggression and counter A. H. Eagly and V. Steffen's (1986) meta-analytically inability to confirm an attenuating effect of provocation on gender Differences in aggression.
Ten years of research on the false-consensus effect: an empirical and theoretical review
Ten years of research on the false-consensus effect (Ross, Greene, & House, 1977) and related biases in social perception (e.g., assumed similarity and overestimation of consensus) are examined in…
Personalization and the Promise of Contact Theory
- N. Miller
- Psychology
- 2002
The article discusses theoretical issues regarding the generalization of positive intergroup contact. It contrasts the models of Brewer and Miller (1984), Hewstone and Brown (1986), and Gaertner and…
Who benefits the most from a gratitude intervention in children and adolescents? Examining positive affect as a moderator
- Jeffrey J. Froh, T. Kashdan, Kathleen M. Ozimkowski, N. Miller
- Psychology
- 11 August 2009
To date, nearly half of the work supporting the efficacy of gratitude interventions did so by making contrasts with techniques that induce negative affect (e.g., record your daily hassles). Gratitude…
The displaced aggression questionnaire.
- T. Denson, W. C. Pedersen, N. Miller
- PsychologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 1 June 2006
An original self-report measure of trait displaced aggression demonstrated good internal consistency and test-retest reliability as well as convergent and discriminant construct validity and predicted indirect indicators of real-world displaced aggression.
Group Process, Group Decision, Group Action
Series forewordPrefaceAcknowledgementsIntroductionSocial facilitationIndividual vs group processTask motivation in groupsSocial influence and conformityExtremity in groupsSocial combination…
Alcohol and aggression: a meta-analysis on the moderating effects of inhibitory cues, triggering events, and self-focused attention.
- T. Ito, N. Miller, V. Pollock
- PsychologyPsychological bulletin
- 1 July 1996
Analysis of 49 studies to investigate 2 explanations of how alcohol increases aggression by decreasing sensitivity to cues that inhibit it showed that the aggressiveness of intoxicated participants relative to sober ones increased as a function of frustration but decreased as afunction of provocation and self-focused attention.
Chewing on it can chew you up: effects of rumination on triggered displaced aggression.
- B. Bushman, Angelica M. Bonacci, W. C. Pedersen, Eduardo A. Vasquez, N. Miller
- PsychologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 31 May 2005
All 3 studies suggest that ruminating about a provocation increases the likelihood that a minor triggering annoyance will increase displaced aggression.
Vicarious Retribution: The Role of Collective Blame in Intergroup Aggression
- B. Lickel, N. Miller, Douglas M. Stenstrom, T. Denson, T. Schmader
- PsychologyPersonality and Social Psychology Review
- 1 November 2006
How ingroup identification, outgroup entitativity, and other variables, such as group power, influence vicarious retribution are described, which provides a new framework for understanding 1 aspect of aggressive conflict between groups, which is referred to as Vicarious retribution.
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