Bandura Flashcards

1
Q

Define social learning theory

A

The theory claims that people learn by observing other people, particularly those they look up to (their role models).

After observing, people then imitates the model’s behaviour, even in other contexts when the model is no longer present.

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2
Q

What is the background of the study?

A
  1. Children readily imitate an adult model’s behaviour in the presence of that model
  2. Parents tend to reward gender appropriate behaviours.
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3
Q

Why was the study carried out?

A
  1. No evidence of whether the children will generalise their imitative responses to new situation, so now wanted to investigate
  2. Now wanted to investigate whether there is a greater degree of imitative learning from a same-sex model rather than opposite sex
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4
Q

What is the aim of the study?

A

To investigate whether a child would learn aggression by observing a model and would reproduce this behaviour in the absence of the model, and whether the sex of role model was important

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5
Q

What are the 4 hypotheses?

A
  1. observed aggressive behaviour will be imitated so children seeing aggressive models will be more aggressive compared to control group

(controlled group more aggressive than non-aggressive group)

  1. children seeing non aggressive role models will be less aggressive
  2. children will be likely to copy same-sex model
  3. boys will be more likely to copy aggression
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6
Q

Define Generalised inhibiting effect

A

calm effect on behaviour expected to be observed in children in non-aggressive model condition.

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7
Q

What is the type of experiment?

A

Laboratory experiment

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8
Q

How did Bandura collect the data?

A

Time sampling, controlled structured observation

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9
Q

What is the sampling technique?`

A

not specified, but likely opportunity sample

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10
Q

How many participants and models? age?

A

36 boys, 36 girls, aged 37 to 69 month

2 adult models, 1 male, 1 female

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11
Q

What is the experimental design?

A

independent groups AND matched participants

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12
Q

3 IVs

A
- Model type
aggressive / non aggressive / no model
- Gender of model
male / female
- Gender of child
male/female
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13
Q

DV

A

The learning demonstrated by the child.

Specifically, imitative and non-imitative verbal and physical aggressive behaviour.

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14
Q

Describe the participants in experiment group 1 and group 2

A
AGGRESSIVE MODEL
24 participants, 12 boys 12 girls
4 groups
Male model with 6 boys
Male model with 6 girls
Female model with 6 boys
Female model with 6 boys

Group 2 = NON AGGRESSIVE
everything same

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15
Q

How did they match the participants, and how did they assign participants to each condition?

A
  1. All children were rated on 5 point scales for
    - verbal and physical aggression
    - aggression towards inanimate objects
    - aggression anxiety

by the experimenter and a nursery teacher.

  1. They were organised into triplets, who would all have the SAME aggression score
  2. Each member of the triplet was allocated to a different condition of the IV - or the control
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16
Q

Was the inter-rater reliability high?

A

Inter-rater reliability was checked for ratings from 51 children, it was high at 0.9, which is a very strong correlation.

17
Q

What is the experimental condition for room 1? (briefly describe)

A

EXPERIMENTAL CONDITION
pps brought into experimental room
model invited
10 minutes, children leaves

18
Q

What are at two corners of the room in room 1?

A

One corner:

  • child’s play area
  • small table, chair
  • picture stickers

The other corner:

  • small table, chair
  • tinker-toy set
  • mallet
  • 5 foot bobo doll
19
Q

What did the aggressive model do?

A
  • assembled toy for 1 minute
  • turned to bobo doll
  • sit on doll and punch on nose
  • hits bobo with mallet
  • throw in air
20
Q

What did the non aggressive model do?

A

model quietly assembled tinker-toy (gentle manner), ignoring the bobo

21
Q

What is the experimental condition for room 2? (briefly describe)

A

AGGRESSION AROUSAL

2 rooms with relatively attractive toys
- a fire engine, train, doll set

22
Q

What happened when the children started to play in room 2?

A

As soon as the children started to play with the toys, the experimenter told the child that these were the experimenter’s very best toys and had to reserve for the other children. However, the subject could play with any of the toys that were in the next room.

23
Q

Why in room 2 experimenter stopped the children from playing?

A

This stage was included to ensure that all participants were under some degree of instigation to aggression

24
Q

Why need to put children under some degree of instigation to aggression? (2 reasons)

A

whether observation of a non-aggressive model had an inhibitory effect when these children were put into a situation that would instigate aggression

research suggests observing an aggressive model reduces the likelihood of aggression, which means children who observed aggressive model may be in a lesser state to instigation aggression than others.

25
Q

What is the experimental condition for room 3? (briefly describe)

A

TEST FOR DELAYED IMITATION
children were told they could play with any toys
- some are aggressive, : 3-foot bobo doll, mallet, tether ball with a face painted on it which hung from the ceiling
- non aggressive: tea set, crayons

  • stayed for 20 mins
26
Q

Where did the researcher stay in room 3?

A

experimenter stayed in room, did paper work in the corner, no communication with child

27
Q

Why did the researcher stay in the room?

A

stayed because some children refuse to stay alone, or leave before the session ends

28
Q

How and what the observer observe in room 3?

A

a record was made by observer, 5 sec = 240 instances recorded per child

ALL 72 children scored by one male researcher, and half scored also by another researcher to check inter-rater reliability

29
Q

Examples for imitative,( physical and verbal aggression, and verbal non-aggression)

A
  • punch the doll in the nose
  • “Pow!” / “sock him!”
  • “he keeps coming back for more”
30
Q

Examples for partially imitative (mallet aggression, sit on bobo)

A
  • strikes toy with mallet rather than Bobo

- sits on it but not aggressive towards it

31
Q

Examples for non-imitative behaviour

A

Punches bobo
- strikes, slaps or pushes the doll aggressively

Physical and verbal aggression

  • “shoot the bobo!”
  • “stupid ball”

aggressive gun play
- shoots darts at objects in the room

non-aggressive play
- does colouring

No play
- sits quietly, not playing

32
Q

4 conclusions of the study

A
  • watching an aggressive model can produce aggression
  • boys are more likely to copy same gender models
  • boys are more likely to copy physical aggressive behaviour than girls
  • aggression from male models is more likely to be copied than female models
33
Q

What is a problem if children of different ages were used?

A
  • more exposure to ‘pre existing aggression’
  • so more aggressive even without model
  • high moral
  • less affected by aggressive model
34
Q

How is subject divided into groups?

A
  • 8 groups of 6 subjects each, and a control group with 24 subjects
35
Q

What did they do to eliminate variation in behaviour due to mere placement of the toys?

A

The play material in the test for delayed aggression was arranged in a fixed order for each of the sessions.

36
Q

What is considered as partially imitated behaviour?

A
  • imitated essential components of the model’s behaviour, but did not perform the complete act
  • or they directed the imitative aggressive response to some object other than the bobo doll