limbic system - gospic et al found aggressive reaction was seen in the amygdala during fmri scan
serotonin - denson et al found that low levels of serotnin link to lower levels of self control and therefore more aggression
neural explanation a03
other system involved than limibic system eg orbitolfrontalcortex - coccaro et al - found that ofc responsible for impulse control was was reduced and this lead to more aggressive behaviour in psychiatric patient
berman et al - drug therapy for serotonin - gave ppt a placebo and a drug which controls serotonin levels and found that ppt with drug gave lower shock and were less aggressive
hormonal explanation a01
testerone - higher levels of it lead to higher levels of aggression in both animals and humans (dolan et al for humans)
hormonal explanation a03
biosocialmodel of status - testerone levels change during the day specially when there is competiton and study found that 75% of male who lost experienced higher levels of testerone and chose to rechallenge (aggressive) when they lost whereas only 22% chose to rechallenge when their levels of testrone dropped
genetic factors in aggression
twin studies - coccaro et al - 50% concordance rate for aggressive behaviour in mz twin whereas only 19% for dz twins
adoption studies - rhee and waldman - genetic influnce accounted for 41% of the of variance in aggression
MAOA gene - low levels of activity mean there is more aggression - brunner et al - aggressive duthc family who had low level of activity of MAOA gene + stuart et al - domestic abusers had faulty MAOA gene and were more aggressive
4. GxE interaction - frazzetto et al - found those with trauma in the first 15 years of their life were aggressively triggered whereas those with just the genes and no trauma were not triggered easily
genetic a03
difficult to separates genes from environmental triggers - Mcdermott et al - low levels of MAOA only bheaved agressive when they were provoked
cannot pin down the specific gene involved - vassos et al - couldnt find evidence of association between a single gene and aggressive behaviour - instead found thousand complex ways genes interact with aggression
research support for mertins et al - high activity of MAOA gene means they were less aggressive and more cooperative in a game
frustration aggression hypothesis
dollard
agression is psychological drive to satisfy biological drives
we exepreice frustration if we cannot achieve our goals
aggression is cathartic bc it reduces the aggressive drive and makes further aggression less likely - gettingthingsoffourchest
agression not always expressed directly bc
cause of frustration might be abstract
or too powerful
unavailble
aggression is displaced onto something available, abstract or weaker than us
green - research into frustration hypothesis
male students completed a jigsaw puzzle where level of frustration was manipulated in conditions
impossible to solve
ran out of time bc confederate kept interfering
confederate insulted ppt as they failed to solve it
green findings
ppt had to adminstrate electric shochs to the confederate
strongest shock - ppt who got insulted
then ppt who had interfereance
then impossible tast
berkowitz - aggression can occur without frustration
anything that interferes with reaching a goal creates negative effect
unanticipated interference causes aggression
berkowitz and lepage
cues are extra part of the hypothesis
students were give shocks by confederates which created frustration
ppt then had to administer shocks to the confederates
number of shocks depended on the presence of weapons in the lab
condition 1 - twoguns next to the machine - avg shocks = 6.07
condition 2 - no guns - avg shocks = 4.67
social frustration a03 -
rage rooms leads to catharsis - impact economy - I+D ethnocentric as it is not practised across the world
research support for displacement from newhall et al - meta analysis and found ppt who werent able to retaliate against their target were more likely to displace on innocent party - I+D enviro deter
evidence against cathartic - bushman found that ppt who vented aggression on punching bag became more aggressive and doing nothing was more effective which is the opposite of what therapist tell patients to do - questions validity of the hypothesis I+D= gender bias
direct learning
agression can be learned through observation and classical conditioning
positive reinforcement in aggression - child snatches toy away learns aggression brings reward - which reinforces aggressive behaviour as an association is made
vicarious reinforcement
child retains aggressive behvaiour and how it is performed
child also oberves the consequence - if it is rewarded then child thinks aggression is effective in getting what they want which leas to vicarious reinforcement
cognitive control of aggression behaviour - mediational processes
attention
retention
reproduction
motivation
self - efficacy
extent to which we believe our actions will achieve a desired goal
confidence in ability to be aggressive grows as they learn that aggression can bring reward
slt a03
poulin and boivin - aggressive 9-12yr old boys formed friendship with other aggressive boys - used alliances to gain resources and they were stable long last friendships - they were frequently exposed to models of aggression and learned reinforcement from others which is what slt predicts - ID - androcentric only uses male sample
huesmann and eron - mediaportrayals can influence acquisition of aggression - especially true when media character is being rewarded which encourages imitation irl - ID - interactionist approach
slt a03
3. culture difference - some cultures have norms about which bhevaiours should be reinforced - kung san social norm is not to behave aggressively so there are no aggressivemodels for children to observe and vicarousreinforcement is rare - I+D slt is ethnocentric
deindividuation
crowd behvaiour - le bon - when in crowd we become like a sponge and soak the behvaiour of ppl around us - individuality is lost and we adopt norms of ppl around us - less responsible for our behaviour when part of a group
zimbardo - when in crowd we lose restraint and may behave in impulsive and irrational manner - responsibility becomes shared and we feel less gulit for harmful aggression
selfawareness
private self-awareness - reduced by anonymity bc attention is focused outwardly to event around us - mean we think less about our own belief and less self-critical
public self - awareness - reduced by anonymity bc we realise we are anonymous and our behaviour is less likely to be judged by others - we become less accountable for our aggressive behaviour
research into deindiviudation
dodds - as students what they would do if there were no consequences for actions and responses were anonymous
findings - 36% of responses involved antisocial behaviour and 26% were actual crimes - only 9% were prosocial behaviours
shows support for deindividuation and anonymity with aggressive behaviour
deindividuation a03
douglass and Mcgarty - strong correlation between anonymity and posting hostile messages - shows support for deindviduation - ID - deterministic not everyone online is aggressive
gergen et al - one condition where they wont be introduced to fellow ppt and other condition they would meet face to face afterwards - found in condition 1 they touched and kissed eachother where condition 2 they didnt - deindividuation doesnt always lead to aggression - culture bias
deindividuation ao3
3. johnson and downing - ppt gave fake electric shocks either wearing mask,kkk outfit or nurse or their own clothes - masked ppt gave higher shocks - nurses gave lower shocks and were more caring which is in line with the prosocial role associated with nurse uniform
suggests prosocial behaviour is just as likely to occur as a result of deindividuation - ID - experimentalreductionist - only measuring ehat the intended to measure and dont take into account individual differences
dispostional explanation - a01
importation model - irwin and cressey - inmates bring with them into prison subcultres typical of criminality
thomas and mcmanimon - imported behvaiours help negotiate way through prison environment
inmates use aggression to establish power and access to resources
aggression is the result of individual characteristics of inmates and not prison environment
research into dispositional
delisi et al - one condition - negative dispositional features eg childhoof trauma, substance abuse - condition 2 fewer negative dispositional features
inmates with most imported negative dispositional features were more likely to commit physical violence compared to control group with fewer negative features
dispostional a03 -
gaes and camp - criminals placed either in high security or low security and found no significant difference in aggressive misconduct - shows features of prison environment are not more important than characteristic of inmates
alternative explanation - dilulio - importation model is inadequate because it ignores roles of prison offical and factors - proposed ACM which is about poorly managed prisons experience higher forms of inmate violence - acm fouses on prison management than inmate characteristics
situational explanation - a01
deprivation model - clemmer - harsh prison conditions cause stress for inmates which leads to aggression
deprivation of material leads aggressive competition to gain them
and unpredicitable prison regimes that regualry uses 'lock-ups' which creates frustration and ultimatley aggression
research into situational explanation
steiner - inmate on inmate violence was more common in prisons where there was higher proportions of
female staff
afro-american inmates
hispanic inmates
protective custody
homosexual inmates
support for deprivation model bc aggression was increased throgh condition of prison
situational explanation a03
cunningham - analysed inmate homocides in texas - found motivation were linked to some of the harsh conditions identified by the deprivation model - ID - culture difference norway prisons are so much better and so cannot explain aggression using situtaional
hensley - studies inmates that were allowed to have sex with vistors however no reduction in aggressive behaviours - doesnt support deprivation model - experimental bias - only focused on lack of hetro sexual contact and not other parts of the deprivation model
media influences
experimental studies - bartholow and anderson - those that played violent games selected highernoise levels to punish opponent
correlationals studies - delisi et al - significant correlation between how often violent games were played/ how much they enjoyed it and aggressive behaviour
media influences p2
3. longitudinal studies - robertson et al - time spent watching tv was a reliable predictor of aggressive behaviour measured in terms of convictions and violent crimes and antisocial behaviour - most important factor was amount of tvwatched rather than violentcontent
4. meta analysis - anderson et al - Exposure to violentcomputergames was associated with increases in aggressive
behaviours, thoughts and feelings. Findings were true for both genders, and across both types of cultures.
desensitisation
When we witness violent act we have increase physilogical arousal - frequent exposure decreases that arousal
funk et al - desensitisation is psychological - repeated exposure leads to a belief that using aggression is acceptable
less empathy is felt as aggression is normalised
weisz & earls - desensitisation
ppt watched graphic rape scenes or a non-violent film
then watched a reanctment of rape trial
male ppt were more acceptant of rape myths and sexual aggression and showed lesssympathy towards the victim in rape trial
disinhibition
computer games show violence and it being rewarded
alos minimise or ignore the consequnces of violence
reward stregthen the new social norm in the viewer - violence is socially accepted
cognitive priming
a script learned about how to behave to aggressive cues
repeatedly watching aggressive media can provide us with a script about how violent situations may play out
huesmann - cognitive priming
sccript are stored and we become primed - ready - to be aggressive
direct process bc a script can direct out behaviour without us being aware of
script is triggered when we see a cue that we find aggressive
fischer et al - cognitive priming
song lyrics to see if cognitive priming took place
male ppt listened to songs about women
ppt later recalled more negative qualities about women and behaved aggressivley to a female confederate
desen,disinhib,cog prim a03
krahe et al - habitual viewers of violent media showed less arousal also higher levels of pleasant arousal and lower anxiety arousal
berkowitz and alioto - media may disinhibit aggressive behaviour when justified by vengeance - adds validity for explanation
practical application for cp - Someone who watches mostly violent media accesses their stored aggressive clips more readily.They are more likely to interpret cues as aggressive therefore resorting to violence.