Block 6 (Part 2) Flashcards

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1
Q

Aggression

A

any behavior intended to harm another person who does not want to be harmed

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2
Q

Violence

A

aggression intended to cause extreme physical harm, such as injury or death

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3
Q

Availability Heuristic

A

the tendency to judge the frequency or likelihood of an event by the ease with which relevant instances come to mind

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4
Q

Relational Aggression

A

intentionally harming another person’s social relationships, feelings of acceptance, or inclusion within a group

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5
Q

Hostile Attribution Bias

A

the tendency to perceive ambiguous actions by others as aggressive

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6
Q

Hostile Perception Bias

A

the tendency to perceive social interactions in general as being aggressive

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7
Q

Hostile Expectation Bias

A

the tendency to assume that people will react to potential conflicts with aggression

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8
Q

Catharsis

A

Greek term that means to cleanse or purge

applied to aggression, catharsis is the belief that acting aggressively or even viewing aggression purges angry feelings and aggressive impulses into harmless channels

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9
Q

Punishment

A

inflicting pain or removing pleasure for a misdeed, punishment decreases the likelihood that a behavior will be repeated

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10
Q

What is social learning theory?

A

behavior is also learned through the observations of others

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11
Q

What happens to people by watching aggressive models?

A

learn specific aggressive behaviors

develop more positive attitudes and beliefs about aggression in general

construct aggressive “scripts”

nonaggressive models decrease aggressive behaviors

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12
Q

What is aggression?

A

aggression is defined as behavior that is intended to harm another individual

how do we know someone’s intentions?

aggressive behavior can come in many different forms

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13
Q

What is violence?

A

violence refers to extreme acts of aggression

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14
Q

What is anger?

A

anger consists of strong feelings of displeasure in response to a perceived injury

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15
Q

What is hostility?

A

hostility is a negative, antagonistic attitude toward another person or group

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16
Q

What is instrumental aggression?

A

harm is inflicted as a means to a desired end

17
Q

What is emotional aggression?

A

harm is inflicted for its own sake

18
Q

What is the relationship between gender and aggression?

A

universal findings that men are more violent women

differences stable over time and place

19
Q

What are challenges to the notion that men are more aggressive than females?

A

boys tend to be more overtly aggressive

girls often are more indirectly, or relationally, aggressive

20
Q

What is the evolutionary psychology of gender differences in aggression?

A

uses principles of evolution to understand both the roots and contemporary patterns of human aggression

males aggress to achieve and maintain status

females aggress to protect offspring

21
Q

What is the relationship between socialization and gender differences in aggression?

A

males and females are rewarded differently for aggression, also have different models

social roles have a strong influence on gender differences in physical aggression

22
Q

What is the relationship between culture and aggression?

A

cultures differ with respect to: the forms violence typically takes, people’s attitudes toward various kinds of aggression

cultures differ in aggression involving children

bullying of students by other students is pervasive around the world

23
Q

What is aggression in cultures of honor?

A

socialization of aggression varies across cultures, cultural differences in machismo

a culture of honor emphasizes honor and status, particularly for males, and the role of aggression in protecting that honor, promotes violent behavior

24
Q

What is the link between media and real-world violence?

A

media reports tend to conclude that the relevant scientific evidence is weak and mixed, at best

research reveals unequivocal evidence that media violence increases the likelihood of aggression and violent behavior in both immediate and long-term contexts

25
Q

What is the longitudinal research on the link between media and real-world violence?

A

examines individual’s exposure to violent media early in life and then examines their real-world aggression years later

26
Q

What is the experiemntal research on the link between media and real-world violence?

A

individuals are randomly assigned to violent or nonviolent media, and their aggressive thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are measured immediately after the exposure

27
Q

How does media cause violence effects?

A

desensitization to violence refers to a reduction in emotion-related physiological reactivity to real violence

cultivation refers to the capacity of the mass media to construct a social reality that people perceive as true, even if it isn’t

28
Q

What is violent pornography?

A

violent pornography is a triple threat: combines high arousal, negative emotions, and aggressive thoughts

programs that include violent pornography have a stronger effect on aggression than any other type of program

one of the few situational factors that increases aggression even in the absence of provocation

29
Q

What is Neil Malamuth’s “rapist profile”?

A

relatively high levels of sexual arousal in response to violent pornography

attitudes and opinions indicating acceptance of violence toward women

negative attitudes and frequent consumption of violent pornography each predict self-reported sexually aggressive intentions

dangers of mixing violence and sexual arousal are not limited to the pornography industry

30
Q

What is sexual aggression among college students?

A

incidence of rape among female college students in the U.S. is (at least) 35 per 1,000

90% of college women who are raped know their assailants

most rapes occur in social situations

a majority of college women and about 1/3 college men report experiencing coercive sexual contact

31
Q

What is partner abuse?

A

approximately 1/3 to 1/2 of female homicide victims are murdered by a husband or a boyfriend

national surveys in 1975 and 1985 showed surprisingly high level of wife-to-husband violence

caused by multiple factors

32
Q

What is child abuse?

A

more than 3 million American children between the ages of 3 and 17 years witness domestic violence every year

child abuse is multiply determined

there is a connection between violence in childhood and violence as an adult