9 - aggression Flashcards

1
Q

what is the definition of aggression according to Baron & Branscombe?

A

behaviour that is designed to harm others in some way

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2
Q

how do researchers measure aggression?

A

analogues of behaviour -bandura bobo dolls, pressing button to deliver shock

signals of intention - willingness to behave aggressively

ratings - self-report, report by others, observation

indirect - non-physical, psychological aggression

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3
Q

critiques of studying aggression

A

analogues of behaviour - not generalisable to real life settings

signals of intention - int-beh gap

ratings - social desirability bias, observers may interpret behaviours in line with prior expectations

indirect - may inflate prevalence of aggression compared to direct aggression

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4
Q

what are theoretical perspectives explaining aggressive behaviour?

A

biological:
- psychodynamic
- evolutionary

biosocial:
- frustration and aggression
- excitation transfer

social:
- social learning theory

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5
Q

what is the psychodynamic explanation for aggressive behaviour?

A

(freud)
- we have an unconscious drive known as ‘Thanatos (death instinct)’
- over time it builds up creating uncontrollable pressure making us so something aggressive
- we deal with this tension by redirecting it to other activities = catharsis

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6
Q

what is the evolutionary explanation for aggressive behaviour?

A

Darwin
- aggressive behaviour ensures genetic survival
- so aggression linked to living long enough to procreate
- among humans - obtain social and economic advantage to improve survival rate of children

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7
Q

what are strengths of the biological approach?

A
  • resonate with idea that violence is part of human nature
  • supported when comparing to animal behaviour
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8
Q

what are limitations of the biological approach?

A
  • unknowable and immeasurable ‘instincts’
  • only supported by observational studies
  • evolution develops over many years, can’t be measured in lab
  • humans are aggressive outside of situations we need to defend ourselves/children
  • not information for prevention or intervention work
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9
Q

how does the frustration-aggression hypothesis explain aggressive behaviour?

A

Dollard et al
- based on catharsis hypothesis
- frustration = individual prevented from achieving goal by external factor
- aggression is a cathartic release of build-up of frustration

cannot always challenge direct source of aggression:
- sublimation - using aggression in acceptable activities e.g. sport
- displacement - direct aggression outwards onto something or someone else

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10
Q

how does excitation transfer explain aggressive behaviour?

A

Zillmann
- people experience physiological arousal in different contexts
- arousal in one context can carry over to other situations and increase likelihood of aggressive behaviour

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11
Q

what are the conditions required for excitation transfer?

A
  • 1st stimuli produces arousal/excitation
  • 2nd stimulus occurs before complete decay of arousal from first stimulus
  • misattribution of excitation to 2nd stimulus
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12
Q

what are strengths of biosocial approaches?

A

provides useful opportunities for interventions target

meta-analysis of 49 studies found support for displacement

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13
Q

what are limitations of biosocial approaches?

A
  • frustration/arousal doesn’t always lead to aggression, and aggression doesn’t always stem from frustration
  • some types of arousal (e.g. exercise) can make us feel good and reduce aggression
  • participants who vented anger by hitting punchbag became more aggressive
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14
Q

how does the social learning theory explain aggressive behaviour?

A

Bandura
- aggression can be learnt
- directly (operant conditioning)
- indirectly (observational learning and vicarious reinforcement)
if aggressive behaviour is rewarded, they learn it is social acceptable

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15
Q

how does gender affect aggression?

A

men engage in aggressive behaviour more frequently than women

individual variation in testosterone levels across genders, and testosterone has weak positive relationship with aggression

we learn gender appropriate behaviours, physical aggression unacceptable for women

genders may differ in type of aggression displayed

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16
Q

how does personality affect aggression?

A

agreeableness: negatively associated with aggression

neuroticism: positive association with aggression

(Barlett & Anderson)

17
Q

how does attachment affect aggression?

A

meta-analysis found offenders were less secure in their attachments than controls

insecure attachment strongly associated with all types of criminality

18
Q

limitations of attachment meta-analysis

A

excluded studies involving juvenile and female offenders

attachment not always measured in the same way

19
Q

what are personal factors that can affect aggression?

A
  • gender
  • attachment
  • personality
20
Q

how does alcohol affect aggression?

A

alcohol present in 68% of incidents of physical aggression
- meta-analyses found alcohol consumption increases aggressive behaviour in men

21
Q

what are the direct effects of alcohol?

A

compromises cortical control and increases activity in primitive brain areas (impaired cognitive function & decision making)

physiological arousal - in line with excitation transfer model

22
Q

what are the indirect effects of alcohol?

A

placebo effect - expectations of receiving alcohol increased aggressive behaviour

priming effect - activating thoughts of alcohol increases aggressive behaviour

23
Q

what are the effects of heat on aggression?

A

increased ambient temperatures associated with increases in aggression

effect not linear - can be too hot to have energy for aggression

24
Q

what are the effects of crowding on aggression?

A

population density linked to crime rates - increases stress, frustration physiological arousal

anonymity in crowds:
disinhibition - social forces that restrain us from acting anti-social are reduced

deindividuation - feeling unidentifiable so unlikely to face consequences

25
Q

what are situational factors that effect aggression?

A
  • alcohol
  • heat
  • crowding
26
Q

how are those in disadvantaged groups affected by aggression?

A

engage in aggression if they believe:
- they are unjustly disadvantaged
- they cannot improve disadvantaged position

rates of violence higher amount young, urban, poor, ethnic minority males - due to mix of social and ecological factors

relative deprived - discontent + feeling that chances of improving conditions through legitimate means is minimal

27
Q

how does violent media effect aggression?

A

easy access to sanitised aggression/violence can desensitise viewers

social learning theory - viewers copy reinforced acts

catharsis hypothesis - release tension and reduce aggression

28
Q

what is the general aggression model (GAM)?

A

(Anderson & Bushman)
interplay between personal and situational variables

influence 3 internal states: cognition, affect, arousal

affecting our appraisal processes (thoughtful or impulsive)

which influence aggressive outcomes (social encounter)

29
Q

how can GAM be applied to institutionalised aggression?

A

strict rules and members have little choice e.g. prisons, schools

institutionalised aggression = aggressive behaviours by members of institutions

25% of prisoners victim of violence per year, 4-5% experience sexual violence, 1-2% raped

30% students experience aggression at school per year

30
Q

what are causes of institutionalised aggression?

A

dispositional factors - personalities of members, importation model

situational factors - situation of members, derivational model

31
Q

prevalence of intimate partner violence

A

30% women aged 15 and older have experienced physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence

female perpetrated IPV occurs more in modern, secular, and liberal societies

32
Q

what are causes of IPV?

A

personal/situational factors:
- biology
- gender
- stresses
- alcohol
- football

social:
- social learning theory, generational cycle of abuse

biosocial:
- excitation transfer, frustration aggression hypothesis, general aggression model