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Full-Text Articles in Interpersonal and Small Group Communication

Fathers' Trait Verbal Aggressiveness And Argumentativeness As Predictors Of Adult Sons' Perceptions Of Fathers' Sarcasm, Criticism, And Verbal Aggressiveness, Michael J. Beatty, James R. Zelley, Jean A. Dobos, Jill E. Rudd Sep 1994

Fathers' Trait Verbal Aggressiveness And Argumentativeness As Predictors Of Adult Sons' Perceptions Of Fathers' Sarcasm, Criticism, And Verbal Aggressiveness, Michael J. Beatty, James R. Zelley, Jean A. Dobos, Jill E. Rudd

Communication Faculty Publications

This research used Infante's (1987) conceptualization of trait verbal aggressiveness and argumentativeness to analyze adult males’ perceptions of their fathers’ messages. In the present study, fathers’ self‐reports of verbal aggressiveness and argumentativeness were used to predict their adult sons’ reports of fathers’ sarcasm, criticism, and global verbal aggressiveness. Results of multivariate regression analyses indicated that (1) fathers’ argumentativeness accounted for a significant percentage of variance in the dependent variable set but did not contribute significantly to the univariate equations and (2) fathers’ verbal aggressiveness explained a significant percentage of the multivariance and contributed significantly to each univariate equation. Overall, the …


Battered Women's Compliance-Gaining Strategies As A Function Of Argumentativeness And Verbal Aggression, Jill E. Rudd, Patricia A. Burant, Michael J. Beatty Jun 1994

Battered Women's Compliance-Gaining Strategies As A Function Of Argumentativeness And Verbal Aggression, Jill E. Rudd, Patricia A. Burant, Michael J. Beatty

Communication Faculty Publications

This study investigated (1) the type of compliance-gaining strategies that battered women reported using in domestic conflicts and (2) whether these strategies related to the battered women's verbal aggression and argumentativeness. Participants in this study were 115 abused women who were seeking refuge from abusive spouses in temporary shelters for battered women. The results suggest that battered women most frequently reported using indirect strategies. Aversive Stimulation (i.e., pouting sulking, crying) and ingratiation (i.e., manipulation in the form of affection or favor-doing) were the top two strategies reported. Furthermore, a canonical correlation analysis resulted in an overall significant relationship between compliance-gaining …