TY - JOUR A1 - Kemper, Christoph J. A1 - Lutz, Johannes A1 - Bähr, Tobias A1 - Rüddel, Heinz A1 - Hock, Michael T1 - Construct validity of the anxiety sensitivity index-3 in clinical samples JF - Assessment N2 - Using two clinical samples of patients, the presented studies examined the construct validity of the recently revised Anxiety Sensitivity Index-3 (ASI-3). Confirmatory factor analyses established a clear three-factor structure that corresponds to the postulated subdivision of the construct into correlated somatic, social, and cognitive components. Participants with different primary clinical diagnoses differed from each other on the ASI-3 subscales in theoretically meaningful ways. Specifically, the ASI-3 successfully discriminated patients with anxiety disorders from patients with nonanxiety disorders. Moreover, patients with panic disorder or agoraphobia manifested more somatic concerns than patients with other anxiety disorders and patients with nonanxiety disorders. Finally, correlations of the ASI-3 scales with other measures of clinical symptoms and negative affect substantiated convergent and discriminant validity. Substantial positive correlations were found between the ASI-3 Somatic Concerns and body vigilance, between Social Concerns and fear of negative evaluation and socially inhibited behavior, and between Cognitive Concerns and depression symptoms, anxiety, fear of negative evaluation, and subjective complaints. Moreover, Social Concerns correlated negatively with dominant and intrusive behavior. Results are discussed with respect to the contribution of the ASI-3 to the assessment of anxiety-related disorders. KW - anxiety sensitivity KW - Anxiety Sensitivity Index KW - ASI-3 KW - construct validity KW - reliability KW - clinical sample KW - factor structure Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1177/1073191111429389 SN - 1073-1911 VL - 19 IS - 1 SP - 89 EP - 100 PB - Sage Publ. CY - Thousand Oaks ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Busching, Robert A1 - Lutz, Johannes T1 - The Impact of Visual Stereotypes on Judgments about Rape A Reverse-Correlation Approach JF - Swiss Journal of Psychology = Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Psychologie = Revue Suisse de Psychologie N2 - Fragestellung: Es soll die Qualität der Berichterstattung über Suizide und Suizidversuche in deutschsprachigen Jugendmagazinen näher untersucht werden und Veränderungen der Suizidzahlen unter Jugendlichen in Österreich nach dem Erscheinen von Berichten erfasst werden. Methodik: Suizidberichte aus fünf großen deutschsprachigen Jugendmagazinen wurden mithilfe qualitativer Inhaltsanalyse im Hinblick auf Geschlecht, dargestellte Motive, Suizid(versuchs)methoden, positive und negative Darstellungsweisen, Schuldzuweisungen und Abweichungen von Medienempfehlungen zur Berichterstattung über Suizid analysiert. Die Suizidzahlen 2 Wochen vor und nach dem Erscheinen von Suizidberichten wurden verglichen. Ergebnisse: 59 Berichte wurden identifiziert. Die häufigste Berichterstattung zum Thema Suizid fand sich in der Zeitschrift Bravo, wobei es zu einer leichten Überrepräsentation weiblicher Suizide und insgesamt zu einer Unterrepräsentation von Suizidversuchen kam. Entsprechend der Epidemiologie suizidalen Verhaltens wurde Sturz in die Tiefe am häufigsten bei Mädchen und Erhängen bei den Jungen beschrieben. Bei den dargestellten Motiven zeigte sich, dass wichtige Faktoren wie psychiatrische Erkrankungen kaum Erwähnung fanden. Während Suizidentinnen häufig positiv dargestellt wurden, wurden Suizidenten häufiger negativ dargestellt. Implizite Schuldzuweisungen wurden vorwiegend den Eltern zugeschrieben. Es zeigte sich kein Hinweis auf einen Werther-Effekt nach Berichterstattung. Schlussfolgerungen: Die weitgehende Divergenz zwischen der Epidemiologie von Suizidalität Jugendlicher und im deutschsprachigen Raum derzeit vorherrschenden Mediendarstellungen verdeutlicht wichtige Ansatzpunkte für Präventions- und Aufklärungsarbeit in der Bevölkerung. KW - reverse correlation KW - rape myth acceptance KW - rape KW - stereotype KW - stereotype visualization KW - rape judgments KW - defendant liability Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1024/1422-4917/a000178 SN - 1421-0185 SN - 1662-0879 VL - 75 SP - 133 EP - 140 PB - Hogrefe CY - Bern ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lutz, Johannes T1 - The Validity of Crowdsourcing Data in Studying Anger and Aggressive Behavior A Comparison of Online and Laboratory Data JF - Social psychology N2 - Crowdsourcing platforms provide an affordable approach for recruiting large and diverse samples in a short time. Past research has shown that researchers can obtain reliable data from these sources, at least in domains of research that are not affectively involving. The goal of the present study was to test if crowdsourcing platforms can also be used to conduct experiments that incorporate the induction of aversive affective states. First, a laboratory experiment with German university students was conducted in which a frustrating task induced anger and aggressive behavior. This experiment was then replicated online using five crowdsourcing samples. The results suggest that participants in the online samples reacted very similarly to the anger manipulation as participants in the laboratory experiments. However, effect sizes were smaller in crowdsourcing samples with non-German participants while a crowdsourcing sample with exclusively German participants yielded virtually the same effect size as in the laboratory. KW - crowdsourcing KW - online research KW - anger KW - aggression KW - frustration KW - mechanical turk Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-9335/a000256 SN - 1864-9335 SN - 2151-2590 VL - 47 SP - 38 EP - 51 PB - Taylor & Francis Group CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lutz, Johannes A1 - Krahe, Barbara T1 - Inducing sadness reduces anger-driven aggressive behavior BT - a situational approach to aggression control JF - Psychology of violence N2 - Objective: The incompatible response hypothesis states that inducing incompatible emotional states mitigates the effect of situational risk factors on aggressive behavior. The current study extended this approach to situated aggression control to withdrawal-related negative emotions. We proposed that even a negative affective state can be incompatible with aggression if its basic motivational orientation counteracts the approach orientation underlying anger and aggression. Specifically, we predicted that although it is inherently negative, sadness may reduce anger-driven aggressive behavior. Method: An experiment was conducted (N = 149) in which half the participants were angered by means of a frustrating number-sequences task, whereas the other half were asked to engage in a similar but nonfrustrating task. To counteract anger-driven aggressive behavior, sadness was induced in half the participants by asking them to recall a sad personal episode. Participants in the no-sadness group recalled an affectively neutral episode. Finally, participants were asked to choose the difficulty level of the number sequences that would ostensibly be assigned to future participants, with the number of difficult sequences chosen indicating the strength of the aggressive response. Results: As predicted, the induction of sadness buffered anger-related aggressive behavior. Anger translated into aggression in the control condition but not in the sadness condition. The aggression-inhibiting effect of the experience of sadness was found to be driven by the compensating coactivation of anger and sadness. Conclusions: The results support the extension of the incompatible response hypothesis to withdrawal-related negative emotions and shed further light on the underlying processes. KW - aggressive behavior KW - sadness KW - anger KW - incompatible response KW - aggression control Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1037/vio0000167 SN - 2152-0828 SN - 2152-081X VL - 8 IS - 3 SP - 358 EP - 366 PB - American Psychological Association CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Krahe, Barbara A1 - Lutz, Johannes A1 - Sylla, Isabel T1 - Lean back and relax BT - Reclined seating position buffers the effect of frustration on anger and aggression JF - European journal of social psychology N2 - Frustration is a powerful instigator of anger-based aggression. We hypothesized that the impact of a frustration on anger and aggressive behavior is reduced in a state of feeling relaxed, which is considered incompatible with the experience of anger. Seventy-nine participants received frustrating feedback either when sitting upright or sitting in a reclined position and were then given a chance to act aggressively toward the frustrator. Feelings of anger and relaxation were assessed before and after the frustration. Participants in the reclined position felt more relaxed than those sitting upright, which indirectly predicted less aggressive behavior via lower anger. The results are consistent with theories of incompatible states and embodiment and have implications for using body-related cues to mitigate anger-based aggression. KW - frustration KW - aggression KW - anger KW - incompatible states KW - seating KW - embodiment Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2363 SN - 0046-2772 SN - 1099-0992 VL - 48 IS - 5 SP - 718 EP - 723 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER -