Lecture 10 -Aggression

    Cards (27)

    • Aggression
      A behaviour that results in personal injury or destruction of property
    • Aggression
      Behaviour intended to harm another of the same species
    • Aggression
      The intentional infliction of some form of harm on others
    • Most common ground in defining aggression is "the intent to harm"
    • Frameworks for explaining aggression
      • Biological
      • Social
    • Biological accounts of aggression
      • Aggression as an innate instinct
      • Aggression as a drive
    • Aggression as an innate instinct
      Aggression has some survival value, an inherent part of human nature, commonalities with other species
    • Lorenz's fighting instinct

      Helps protect offspring and young, useful to defend territory, leads to survival of strongest
    • Frustration-aggression hypothesis
      Aggression is the direct result of frustration, energy has to be released if the objective of an activity cannot be performed
    • Frustration does not always lead to aggression and frustration is not always necessary for aggression
    • The frustration-aggression hypothesis cannot account for learned or inter-group aggression, or 'symbolic' aggression
    • General Learning Model of video game effects
      • Affects perceptual-cognitive constructs, cognitive-emotional constructs, emotional constructs
    • Pornography exposure

      Increases tolerance of sexual violence towards women
    • Some studies suggest an inverse relationship between pornography and sex crimes
    • Aggressive people prefer certain types of pornography
    • Cognitive neo-associationistic model

      Cues in the environment will increase aggression, subjective frustration causes aggression
    • Social learning theory
      Aggressive behaviour is reinforced if rewarded, learned through observation and imitation
    • Deindividuation
      State of mind where one 'gets lost' in the group and ceases to see oneself as an individual, based on anonymity, diffusion of responsibility and short time perspective
    • Realistic Conflict Theory

      Competition between groups arises because groups compete for scarce resources
    • Perceived Relative Deprivation (PRD) Theory
      Conflict arises from an unacceptable discrepancy between what people think they are entitled to and what they realistically can attain
    • Egoistic relative deprivation
      Feeling of personally having less than we feel entitled to, relative to personal aspirations or other individuals
    • Fraternalistic relative deprivation

      Sense that our group has less than it is entitled to, relative to the collective aspirations or other groups
    • Personal relative deprivation is associated with increased aggression and can spread through social networks
    • Improvements in socioeconomic conditions of disadvantaged groups can lead to increased aggression due to relative deprivation and rising expectations
    • Traditional agricultural societies tend to have less violence due to lower levels of relative deprivation
    • Factors affecting relative deprivation
      • Strong group identification
      • Perceived effectiveness of action
      • Perceptions of injustice
      • Ingroup-outgroup comparisons
    • Male warrior hypothesis
      Men display more xenophobic and ethnocentric attitudes than women, and are more likely to dehumanize outgroup members
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