Personality traits as predictors of anxiety and aggression in contrasted groups: clinical and non-clinical
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31505/rbtcc.v19i2.1033Keywords:
Personality Traits, Neuroticism, Anxiety, AggressivenessAbstract
The present work aimed to investigate the influence of personality traits, especially neuroticism, in levels of anxiety and aggressiveness displayed in contrasted groups (clinical and non-clinical). This research relied on a sample of 113 individuals, 49 (43.4%) males and 64 (56.6%) females, aged between 18 to 57 (M = 25,32; DP = 8,80). Three psychometric scales of measurement were used: IGFP-5, STAXI-2, and BAI. The data collection occurred in two federal public universities from two state capitals, Maceió and Belo Horizonte (non-clinical group), and also in school clinics and private clinics in Maceió (clinical group). Single differences were integrated – the big five personality factors (BFF) – in relation to statistical and psychobiological factors, assuming that personality traits overlap themselves and are responsible for the maturation and constant flexibility in the development of personality for having genetic factors in connection with environmental aspects. The conclusions suggest that neuroticism (IGFP-5) is positively correlated with anxiety (BAI), some aspects of the aggressiveness (STAXI-2), and aggressive response control (outwards and inwards aggressiveness of Staxi-2), which can be related to inability in the inhibitory controlDownloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The Brazilian Journal of Cognitive and Behavioral Therapy own the copyright of all articles published by it. The reproduction of articles in this journal in other publications, or for any other purpose, by any other means, requires permission from the Editor.
Pre-Print, Accepted Manuscript, and Final Published Version Archiving, Sharing and Re-Use Policy
The authors’ contribution to RBTCC has three versions, which are defined below and can be archived, shared, and re-used under the following conditions:
1. A pre-print (or original submission) is the author’s version of the article before peer-review has taken place. Prior to acceptance for publication, author(s) retain the right to make a Pre-Print of their article available: on their own personal, self-maintained website; or on a legally compliant pre-print server (e.g., PsyArXiv, arXiv). Once the article has been published, the author(s) should update their acknowledgement and provide a link to the definitive version on RBTCC’s website, adding a text such as: “This is a pre-print of an article published in the Brazilian Journal of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy. The final authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/[insert DOI]”. RBTCC encourages posting of preprints of manuscripts on preprint servers, authors’ or institutional websites, and open communications between researchers whether on community preprint servers or preprint commenting platforms. Posting of preprints is not considered prior publication and will not jeopardize consideration from RBTCC. Authors should disclose details of preprint posting - including DOI and licensing terms - upon submission of the manuscript or at any other point during consideration at RBTCC publication process.
2. An accepted manuscript is the version accepted for publication in RBTCC following peer review but prior to copyediting and typesetting that can be made available under the following conditions:
(i) on their own personal, self-maintained website immediately on acceptance,
(ii) for public release, 12 months after first publication (i.e., "Embargo Period"), on any of the following: their employer’s internal website; their institutional and/or funder repositories. Accepted manuscripts may also be deposited in such repositories immediately on acceptance, provided that they are not made publicly available until after the Embargo Period.
An acknowledgement in the following form should be included with a link to the published version on the publisher’s website: “This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in the Brazilian Journal of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy. The final authenticated version is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/[insert DOI]”.
3. The final published (PDF) version is the copy-edited and typeset RBTCC’s PDF, the same version published on the journal’s website. It can be archived in institutional or funder repositories and can be made publicly accessible immediately.
Any re-use terms for users of websites and repositories (where your pre-print or accepted manuscript are posted) are restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses.
The authors may not republish or translate any version of their contribution in another journal without prior permission from RBTCC’s Editor-in-Chief.