Dm. Dougherty et al., THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SELF-REPORTED MENSTRUAL SYMPTOMATOLOGY AND AGGRESSION MEASURED IN THE LABORATORY, Personality and individual differences, 22(3), 1997, pp. 381-391
This study investigated the relationship between the severity of self-
reported menstrual cycle symptoms and a laboratory measure of aggressi
on. Two groups of women were recruited, one group reporting low and on
e group reporting moderate to high perimenstrual symptoms. Scores from
the Negative Affect subscale of the Menstrual Distress Questionnaire
(MDQ) were used to define groups. Each of 40 subjects (20 high symptom
and 20 low symptom) participated in three testing sessions of the (C)
Point Subtraction Aggression Paradigm, an established methodology for
measuring aggression in the laboratory. There were two significant fi
ndings: (a) the high symptom group emitted higher rates of aggressive
response than the low symptom group independent of which menstrual cyc
le phase they were in when tested; and (b) rates of aggressive respons
e were significantly correlated with the MDQ's Negative Affect and Beh
avior Change scales for the menses and premenstrual phases (but not fo
r the remainder of the cycle). These findings indicate that self-repor
ts of perimenstrual symptoms are predictive of an individual's tendenc
y to respond aggressively when provoked, and suggest that retrospectiv
ely linking self-reported menstrual symptom severity with behavior is
problematic because individuals endorsing or not endorsing these sympt
oms may differ behaviorally regardless of menstrual cycle phase. (C) 1
997 Elsevier Science Ltd.