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Emotional reactivity and the association between psychopathy-linked narcissism and aggression in detained adolescent boys

Muñoz, L.C.; Kimonis, E.R.; Frick, P.J.; Aucoin, K.J.

Emotional reactivity and the association between psychopathy-linked narcissism and aggression in detained adolescent boys Thumbnail


Authors

L.C. Muñoz

E.R. Kimonis

P.J. Frick

K.J. Aucoin



Contributors

LC Centifanti fmnv66@durham.ac.uk
Other

Abstract

Different patterns of emotional reactivity characterize proactive and reactive functions of aggressive behavior, and theory also suggests a link of both types with narcissism. How people with narcissistic traits respond emotionally to competitive scenarios could influence their aggressiveness. Participants were 85 adolescent boys from a detention center. Several indices of emotional functioning were assessed, including attentional bias to negative emotional stimuli and psychophysiological responding. In addition, we included self-report and laboratory measures of aggression and measures of psychopathy-linked narcissism, callous–unemotional traits, and impulsivity. Psychopathy-linked narcissism was uniquely related to unprovoked aggression (i.e., proactive aggression) and to heightened attention to pictures depicting others’ distress. Compared with those scoring low on narcissism, those high on narcissism, who were the least physiologically reactive group, evinced greater proactive aggression, whereas those showing a pattern of coactivation (i.e., sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic reactivity) evinced greater reactive aggression. Results are consistent with descriptions of narcissistic individuals as being hypervigilant to negative cues and exhibiting poor emotion regulation. These characteristics may lead to aggressive and violent behavior aimed at maintaining dominance over others.

Citation

Muñoz, L., Kimonis, E., Frick, P., & Aucoin, K. (2013). Emotional reactivity and the association between psychopathy-linked narcissism and aggression in detained adolescent boys. Development and Psychopathology, 25(2), 473-485. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0954579412001186

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2013-05
Deposit Date Nov 24, 2011
Publicly Available Date Jan 5, 2012
Journal Development and Psychopathology
Print ISSN 0954-5794
Electronic ISSN 1469-2198
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 25
Issue 2
Pages 473-485
DOI https://doi.org/10.1017/s0954579412001186
Publisher URL http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=DPP

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