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Effects of Social Exclusion on Displaced Aggression: the Mediation Effect of Stress and Conditional Direct Effect of Social Support

Korean Psychological Journal of Culture and Social Issues / Korean Psychological Journal of Culture and Social Issues, (P)1229-0661; (E)1229-0661
2023, v.29 no.4, pp.455-476
https://doi.org/10.20406/kjcs.2023.11.29.4.455


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Abstract

This study focused on the characteristics of motiveless crimes that mainly originated from interpersonal problems and were acts of revenge against innocent third parties. This study confirmed the relationship between the experience of social exclusion and displaced aggression and examined the relationship between the two variables. For this purpose, we established and tested hypotheses about the mediation effect of stress and the moderated mediation effect of social support on the effect of social exclusion experience on displaced aggression among 353 adult males aged between 19 and 49 years. The main results are that, first, social exclusion had a positive effect on displaced aggression. Second, stress was found to partially mediate the relationship between social exclusion and displaced aggression. Third, the hypothesis that social support would moderate the mediating effect of stress was not vaild, but the conditional direct effect of social support was confirmed in the mediation model. In other words, social support did not affect the indirect effect mediated by stress, but appeared to moderate the direct effect between social exclusion and displaced aggression. Social exclusion’s prediction of displaced aggression was significant only in the average social support group (mean) and the high group (M+1SD), and appeared to increase as the group increased. This means that in groups with high social support, displaced aggression is used as a stress control strategy, which is a different result from previous studies that found that social support lowers aggression. People with low levels of social support showed unexpected results in that they used displaced aggression less frequently despite their experience of social exclusion. In the discussion, the social implications of these results were interpreted, and additional research ideas were proposed to specify the relationship between social exclusion and displaced aggression.

keywords
social exclusion, displaced aggression, stress, social support, conditional direct effect
Submission Date
2023-07-26
Revised Date
2023-08-06
Accepted Date
2023-10-05

Korean Psychological Journal of Culture and Social Issues