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Paper 3
Aggression
frustration-aggression hypothesis
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Cards (6)
the frustration aggression hypothesis suggests that
frustration
(being blocked from achieving goals) causes
aggressive
behaviour
and that after behaving aggressively, a person can experience
catharsis
where their negative feelings go away
displacement is when aggression cant be directed at the
source
and is instead directed elsewhere (a
person
or an
object
)
there are three factors that affect the likelihood of frustration leading to aggression
proximity
to the goal
effectiveness
of aggression
justifiability
of the behaviour of the person blocking our goals
Doob and Sears
gave
hypothetical
scenarios to participants
participants reported that they would feel
angrier
in the more frustrating situations
which supports the idea of the frustration aggression hypothesis
Priks et al -
swedish
football, real life application
found that
swedish
football fans displayed more aggression when their team is performing worse
their goal of seeing their team win has been blocked
Bushman et al - limitation of
catharsis
made participants angry and then had some of them punch a punching bag and some of them do nothing
according to the FA hypothesis, those who punched a punching bag should be calmer, however this was not the case
Bushman found that those who expressed their anger reported
more
anger at the end of the study
this suggests that expressing anger does not lead to
catharsis