It's in Our Nature: Verbal Aggressiveness As Temperamental Expression
It's in Our Nature: Verbal Aggressiveness As Temperamental Expression
It's in Our Nature: Verbal Aggressiveness As Temperamental Expression
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It's in Our Nature:
Verbal Aggressiveness As
Temperamental Expression
Michael J.Beatty and James C. McCroskey
A scorpion ona asked afrog for a ride across a lake. Thefrog pointed out that Irefeared
the scorpion's deadly sting. "Now why would I do that?" retorted the scorpion
"after all if I sting you we both drown." Having won the argument, the scorpion
hopped on th£ frog's back and into th£ water th£y went. Ha1fioay across th£ lake the scorpion
stung th£ frog. "Why did you do that?" screamed th£ frog "now welre both going to di£!" "1
wall of the limbic lobe, the olfactory cortex, the cingulate and subcallosal gyri, and the
subcortical areas of the amygdala, hypothalamus, epithalamus, anterior thalamic
nuclei and a portion of the basal nuclei. The BISresponds to novel stimuli and those
associated with potential punishment and cessation of reward. When activated, the
BISproduces increased arousal due to its connection with the limbic system, increased
attentional focus on threatening stimuli and halting of behavior. Not surprisingly, low
thresholds for BIS activation are common to anxiety prone individuals.
Stimulation of the BIS, concurrent with FFS activation, due to the perception of
potentially punishing stimuli or loss of rewards for acting on urges produced by the
combination of FFS and BAS activation tends to inhibit aggression. The antagonistic
function of the BJSin the context of aggression provides neurobiological evidence for
Infante's (1987) proposition that aggressive behavior could be inhibited even for
individuals high in trait aggressiveness, thereby corroborating Infante's rejection of
the cross-situational consistency argument
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A WORKING MODEL OF VERBALAGGRESSIVENESS AS :
TEMPERAMENTAL-EXPRESSION 1
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We propose that individual differences in FFS,BAS, and BJSreactivity account for
the way people score on Infante and Wigley's (1986)VAS. High levels of trait verbal t
aggressiveness can be described in terms of (1) a low threshold for BASactivity, (2) a f.
low threshold for FFS activity, but (3) a high threshold for BJSactivity. In concrete f.
terms, individuals high in verbal aggressiveness are highly motivated to achieve goals ".
through interpersonal interaction, quickly turn to aggressive tactics when initial
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attempts fail, and without sufficient inhibition, become highly aggressive. The f
attentional focus, which accompanies system activation, promotes persistent focus on
the goal and minimizes focus on potential negative consequences of aggressive J'
symbolic action.
Within our proposed model, we would expect verbal aggression from people who
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are low in trait verbal aggressiveness when stimuli from the environment are ~.
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sufficient to activate BAS and FFSbut insufficient to trigger BIS involvement People (
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high in verbal aggressiveness are not expected to behave aggressively when stimuli are
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insufficient to activate BASand FFSor are sufficient to trigger BJSfunctioning. In this
regard, our position is consistent with Infante' s ~(1987)initial delineation of the
interactionist perspective of trait verbal aggressiveness. However, verbal aggression
as temperamental expression implies that compared to individuals low in trait verbal
aggressiveness, high scorers on verbal aggression instruments engage in aggressive
communication more because the neurobiological circuitry underlying their
behavioral systems requires comparatively less stimulation to facilitate and more .'
stimulation to inhibit aggressive responses. When persons high in verbal aggression
are thwarted in the pursuit of highly valued goals and at the same time precluded from
acting aggressively, we would expect them to experience high levels of internal stress.
Why verbal expressions of aggression are manifest rather than violence remains
a puzzle. Certainly, many scholars have argued that verbal aggression can escalate
into violence during interpersonal conflicts (deTurck, 1987; Infante, 1987; Infante &
Rancer, 1999; Roloff, 1996). At this juncture, we believe that the mode of
temperamental expression depends on the degree of activation of the FFS and BAS
relative to the BIS.Although we have discussed the three systems as though they were
either activated or dormant, most (but not all) functions operate along a continuum
IMPUCATIONS OF A TEMPERAMENT-BASED
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CONCEPTUAliZATION OF VERBALAGGRESSION
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The position advanced is this essay has four implications for research and theory
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pertaining to verbal aggressiveness. First, as mentioned in the meta theoretic
principles guiding our thinking, trait verbal aggressiveness is presented as an
expression of inborn, neurobiological structures, leaving little variation in the trait due
to environment. How then do we account for the apparent linkage reported by some
scholars between parenting and subsequent aggressiveness of offspring (e.g.,
Baumrind, 1971; Brook, Brook, Whiteman,& Gordon, 1983;Straus & Gelles, 1980)?
Bearing in mind that scholars have pointed out that the strength of association for
the intergenerational hypothesis is not large, and is greatly overstated (In addition to
the studies of twins reviewed in this essay see Kaufman &Zigler, 1993for commentary
on the evidence for intergenerational models), consider that studies thought to
document the effects of family environment have not controlled for the effect of
neurobiological systems common to parents and off-spring. As an illustration, a
longitudinal study by Brook, Brook, Whitehead, and Gordon (1983)found thatfathers'
parenting style correlated with sons' impulsivity and interpersonal sensitivity during
college-aged years. Specifically, impulsive, insensitive sons were most likely to have
been reared by authoritarian fathers. Beatty and his colleagues (1996),for example,
interpreted these findings as support for parenting effects, a reasonable conclusion
when psychobiological research is ignored. However, we now know that impulsivity
is largely inherited (Zuckerman, 1994, 1995) and that the behaviors coded as
"sensitive" may well be expressions of genetically determined social traits (see the
earlier cited studies of twins). We also know that parenting behavior is associated with
parents' trait verbal aggressiveness such that aggressive parents are more likely to
engage in authoritarian tactics (Bayer & Cegala, 1992;Beatty, Burant, Dobos, & Rudd,
1996). Thus, prior to drawing inferences about direct effects of parenting style or
behavior on children's trait development, it is necessary to first remove the variance
due to neurobiological systems common to parents and children. We must also
recognize that genetic transfers are complex, invol~g the families of both parents
and often skipping generations. Therefore, we do not contend that children's traits are
simple functions of parents' biological traits but only that traits such as verbal
aggressiveness are due to inborn, neurobiological systems representing the mingling
of family genes and the impact of physical stimuli (e.g., prenatal care, trauma, etc.). In
light of the rapidly growing body of psychobiological evidence, we contend that the
observed correlations between sets of family environment variables and indices of
children's social development are spurious, amounting to correlations among
dependent variables: Both sets of variables are effects of common biological origins.
Following this line of reasoning, we propose that trait verbal aggressiveness is
relatively free from environmental effects in its development.
Second, our purpose in advancing a temperament-based model of verbal
aggressiveness was two-fold: (1)to reformulate the construct in light of advances in
neurobiology, and (2) to stimulate thinking and resea~h activity. We recognize that
our treatment is necessarily incomplete. As further research accumulates some of our
ideas will be confirmed, some will be revised, and some will be falsified. However, we
believe that the infusion of knowledge from the temperament literature provides ..
biological evidence for the legitimacy of the vast majority of Infante and his colleagues' \'
theorizing about verbal aggressiveness. f
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Third, while we do not envision verbal aggression researchers conducting CAT .
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scans, analyzing blood samples, conducting gene splicing experiments, or boring holes I.
into the heads of verbally aggressive communicators (although if current trends are i'
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any indication the related disciplines of neurobiology and psychobiology might be /;
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regarded as appropriate cognate areas for graduate study in communication), we do
maintain that theoretical speculation about aggressive communication must be ".j
consistent with neurological functioning. As mentioned earlier, all cognitive and
affective processes take place in the brain and must be describable in terms of
neurobiological functioning. Although proposing hypothetical constructs without
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reference to their biological existence might have been useful in the early development
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of the discipline when data were in short supply, that time has past. Psychobiologists r,
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are rapidly increasing our knowledge of how and why we behave as we do. It is time
that our theories of communicative behavior are informed by that growing body of !'
knowledge about human functioning.
Finally, the position advocated in this essay represents a radical departure from
traditional and current thinking in the field of communication. However, we view
such a paradigm shift as not only healthy but necessary. It is perhaps useful to
remember that the purpose of scientific theory is not only to perform a descriptive
function but also to provide explanations. In recent years, unfortunately, most of the
theoretical work in interpersonal communication has focused on description. ,
Embracing a temperament-based perspective, on the other hand, leads to an
explanation for why we behave as we do. It's in our nature.
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