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Gender Differences, Anger Expression, and Cardiovascular Risk
Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 2009Research has established the influence of serum cholesterol and anger management style as cardiovascular risk factors. However, mixed and sometimes contradictory results have created uncertainty with respect to contributions of anger. Some incongruities may be accounted for on the basis of gender differences since a number of studies have employed male
Joseph A, Doster +4 more
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The expression of anger and its consequences
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1996Cluster analysis, using TRYSYS key cluster variable analyses, on 59 anger expression items replicated Spielberger's Anger-In and Anger-Control dimensions and revealed seven additional forms of anger expression: Noisy Arguing, Verbal Assault, Physical Assault-People, Physical Assault-Objects, Reciprocal Communication, Time Out, and Direct Expression ...
J L, Deffenbacher +3 more
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Assessing Anger Expression in Children and Adolescents
Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 1994Anger expression styles are associated with psychological and physical well-being among adults. Little is known about the role of anger expression in children's functioning. This lack of knowledge has resulted, in part, from a lack of validated tools for anger expression measurement.
K J, Hagglund +8 more
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[A questionnaire for assessing anger and expression of anger].
Zeitschrift fur klinische Psychologie, Psychopathologie und Psychotherapie, 1991The State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory (STAXI) developed by Spielberger is a measure for state- and trait-anger and three different forms of anger expression. People differ in the extent to which they express anger overtly and directly (anger out), how often anger feelings are hold in or suppressed (anger in) or in the extent to which they are able
P, Schwenkmezger, V, Hodapp
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Expressing anger positively could reduce eating disorders
Nursing Children and Young People, 2016Lessons on how to express anger in direct and positive ways could help reduce eating disorders in women and girls, say the authors of a new report.
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Gender differences in anger expression: Health implications
Research in Nursing & Health, 1989AbstractAnger expression modes were examined in a diverse sample of mid‐life men and women (N = 139) participating in the third phase of a longitudinal study of health that began in 1982 at the World's Fair and a metropolitan general hospital in Tennessee. Contrary to previous studies, men and women did not differ in the likelihood of suppressing their
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Blame the Bot: Anthropomorphism and Anger in Customer–Chatbot Interactions
Journal of Marketing, 2022exaly
Anger expression and essential hypertension
Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 2004Kevin T Larkin, Claudia Zayfert
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