Got a tattoo? Then you're probably AGGRESSIVE: People with inkings are more likely to be rebellious and angry, study claims
- Those with tattoos were found to have ‘significantly higher’ levels of verbal aggression, anger, and were more rebellious compared with people without
- Findings are surprising as it had been thought that as tattoos had become more mainstream – with a tattoo parlour seemingly on every street today
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People with tattoos have been found to be more aggressive (stock image pictured)
Tattoos have had an image makeover in recent years.
Once the preserve of convicts and biker gangs, they are now called ‘body art’ and even the Prime Minister’s wife has one.
But people with tattoos have been found to be more aggressive and rebellious than those without, researchers have found.
The
research has been seen as surprising as it had been thought that as
tattoos had become more mainstream – with a tattoo parlour seemingly on
every high street these days – there would be little difference between
the inked or un-inked.
Professor Viren Swami of Anglia Ruskin University studied 378 adults – 181 women and 197 men aged between 20 and 58.
Of these 97 – one in four – had tattoos.
Those
with tattoos were found to have ‘significantly higher’ levels of verbal
aggression, anger, and were more rebellious compared with people
without tattoos.
The
more tattoos a person had, the more angry they were, the survey found.
There were no significant differences between tattooed and non-tattooed
people in their educational qualifications.
The
research found that tattoos had become ‘mainstream’ – with ‘no
significant difference’ in the social background between those who with
and without tattoos, and men and women were equally likely to be adorned
with body art.
The
tattooed people – members of the general public questioned in high
streets, underground stations and parks in London - were more likely to
be rebellious in a ‘reactive’ way.
Someone
who showed ‘reactive rebelliousness’ would answer they would ‘get angry
and argue back’ if someone in authority shouted at them.
Proactively
rebellious people were more likely to answer positively to questions
such as: ‘If you are asked particularly not to do something, do you feel
an urge to do it? on the test measures.
Professor
Swami, professor of Social Psychology said: ‘We found that tattooed
adults had significantly higher reactive rebelliousness, but not
proactive rebelliousness, compared with non-tattooed adults.
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Not a taboo: The research has been
seen as surprising as it had been thought that as tattoos had become
more mainstream (shot from Justin Bieber's Instagram account pictured)
‘One
explanation is that people who have higher reactive rebelliousness may
respond to disappointing and frustrating events by getting tattooed.
‘That
is, when these individuals experience a negative emotional event, they
may be more likely to react by pursuing an act that is seen as defiant.
The act of tattooing is perceived as rebellious, or more generally
tattoos themselves can signify defiance or dissent.
‘On
the other hand, there were no significant differences between tattooed
and non-tattooed adults in proactive rebelliousness. It is possible that
this form of rebelliousness, which is hedonistic and goal-driven, is at
odds with the pain and permanence of tattoos.
‘We
also found that tattooed adults had higher aggression scores on two of
the four dimensions of aggression that we measured, namely verbal
aggression and anger.
‘Although
tattoos have now become commonplace in modern British society, our
findings may have implications for understanding the reported
associations between tattooing and risky behaviour among adults.’
The
good news is that people with tattoos seem no more likely to react with
physical aggression than anyone else, according to the research
published in Body Image.
The
finding that one in four people had a tattoo in the study tallies with
2006 research by dermatologists in the United States, which found 24 per
cent of people were tattooed.
Drawbacks of the research include that the measures of aggression were self-reported.
The
researchers did not look at the designs of the tattoos. It is possible
that someone with a dainty dolphin on the foot, as sported by Samantha
Cameron, might be less aggressive than someone with a teardrop tattooed
under the eye – said to be the sign of someone who has taken a human
life.
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