Aggression: intentional behaviour at causing physical/psychological pain to another person
Instrumental aggression is aggression as a means to a goal
Hostile aggression stems from feelings of anger and aimed at inflicting pain
Children imitate aggressive adults and treated Bobo Doll in abusive ways (Bandura, 1961)
Frustration Aggression Theory states that when prevented from attaining a goal, frustration leads to possible aggressive responses
Frustration-Aggression Theory supports the idea that discomfort increases aggression e.g. heat, offensive odours
Dollard et al. (1939) found that frustrated children who had to wait to play showed aggressive playstyles compared to control group
Relative deprivation: occurs when people see a difference between what they have and what they expect, leading to frustration
Testosterone may lead to aggression by reducing our ability to control impulses - reduced activity in the orbitofrontal cortex which is key brain area for self-regulation and impulse control
The Challenge Hypothesis: states that testosterone and aggression are only related when opportunities for reproduction are high (Buss, 2002)
Dual-Hormone Hypothesis: testosterone relates to dominance-seeking behaviour only when the stress hormone is low (Mehta & Josephs, 2010)
Social Learning Theory suggests we can learn aggression through observational learning
Games that directly reward violent behaviour are likely to increase feelings of hostility and aggression (Anderson et al., 2010)
Exposure to violence may lead to desensitisation (Thomas, 1982)
Habituation: our bodies respond to a stimulus less and less as we are exposed to it repeatedly
Exposure to media violence leads to desensitisation due to 3 reasons: increases physiological arousal, triggers automatic tendency to imitate violence, and they activate aggressive ideas/expectations
Students either watched a violent episode of police drama or a non-violent sport event, results showed that those who watched the police drama played much more violently with toys compared to those who watched the sporting event (Liebert & Baron, 1972)