| Literature DB >> 28095931 |
Norma Ortega Andrade1, Raúl Alcázar-Olán2, Oscar Mariano Matías1, Ana Rivera Guerrero1, Alejandra Domínguez Espinosa3.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to assess the validity of the Anger Rumination Scale (ARS; Sukhodolsky, Golub, & Cromwell, 2001) in a Mexican sample (n = 700, M age = 38.6, SD = 12.42). Through confirmatory factor analysis and using modification indices, the four-factor structure of the original scale was replicated: angry afterthoughts, thoughts of revenge, angry memories, and understanding of causes. In addition, the four-factor model had better goodness of fit indices than rival models with three and two factors. Alpha reliabilities were acceptable (.72 -.89). ARS results correlated with measures of state anger, trait anger, anger expression, and anger control (negatively); correlations were significant (ps < .001) ARS outcomes also correlated (ps < .001) with physical and verbal aggression, hostility, anger, and emotion suppression, suggesting convergent validity. Men reported more thoughts of revenge than women (p < .001; Eta squared = .026), but there was no evidence of gender differences on the other anger rumination scales, or in total scores.Entities:
Keywords: aggression; anger; rage; rumination
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28095931 DOI: 10.1017/sjp.2016.105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Span J Psychol ISSN: 1138-7416 Impact factor: 1.264