investigated the relationship between the amygdala and aggressive behaviour in prisoners
19 prisoners, 20 control
found the volume of the amygdala in prisoners to be smaller than that of the control
limitation: lacks population validity and therefore may not generalise to the wider population
could be accused of androcentrism since the research only included men - beta bias
Support for the role of other brain structures
orbitofrontal cortex (responsible for self control, impulse regulation and the inhibition of the amygdala)
Found that patients with psychiatric disorders that feature aggression have reduced activity in the orbitofrontal cortex
suggests that features outside of the limbic system are involved in aggression
deterministic NOT free will - biologically, they have no control over their aggression
Sumer et al - case study support for the role of the amygdala
A young girl who had excessively aggressive behaviour
Also had a tumour pressing against her amygdala
Tumours can increase neuronal activity of adjacent structures
Hence why her amygdala may have become overactive, causing more aggressive behaviour
Sumer performed an amygdalotomy
Found that the girls aggressive behaviour decreased greatly
Crockett - support for the role of serotonin
Gave participants drugs that increased serotonin levels
And other participants drugs that decreased serotonin levels
Then put them in a situation where money was split between them and another person unfairly
Found that those with decreased serotonin displayed more aggressive behaviour than those with increased serotonin when it came to the money being split unfairly
This shows an association between serotonin levels and aggression
Dabbs et al - to look for a link between aggression and testosterone
Measured testosterone levels in prisoner saliva
higher concentration = more likely to be convicted for violent crimes
however not all studies have replicated this finding
the biological explanation ignores non-biological factors such as the environment and social factors
mpakopoulou
did a review of 13 case studies where patients with seizures had an amygdalectomy
found that aggression reduced by 33-100%
suggests that the amygdala does play a role in aggression but perhaps that there are other parts that also come into play
a general limitation for studies supporting the role of the amygdala is that study findings were inconsistent
some showed a decrease in aggression and some showed an increase in aggression (after an amygdalectomy)