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Aggression: Hurting Others

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Title: Aggression: Hurting Others


1
Chapter 10
  • Aggression Hurting Others

2
Aggression
  • Definition Physical or verbal behavior that is
    intended to hurt another person
  • It is behavior (not angry feelings)
  • It is intended (not accidental harm)
  • It is aimed at hurting (not assertiveness or
    playfulness)

3
Type of Aggression
What is Aggression?
Definition
Example
Attempt to hurt another without obvious
face-to-face conflict
Indirect Aggression
Spreading a rumor that your ex-romantic partner
has a sexually transmitted disease
Direct Aggression
Hostile Aggression
Instrumental Aggression
4
Type of Aggression
What is Aggression?
Definition
Example
Indirect Aggression
Behavior intended to hurt someone to his or her
face
A hockey player punches another player
Direct Aggression
Hostile Aggression
Instrumental Aggression
5
Type of Aggression
What is Aggression?
Definition
Example
Indirect Aggression
A boy punches another player who bumped into him
while playing basketball
Aggression driven by anger and performed as an
end in itself hot process
Direct Aggression
Hostile Aggression
Instrumental Aggression
6
Type of Aggression
What is Aggression?
Definition
Example
Indirect Aggression
Aggression that is a means to some other end
cold process
Direct Aggression
A mother spanks a child to discourage him from
repeating a tantrum
Hostile Aggression
Instrumental Aggression
7
Theories of Aggression
  • Three big ideas
  • There is a biologically rooted aggressive drive
  • Aggression is a natural response to frustration
  • Aggressive behavior is learned

8
Aggression as Biology
  • Instinct theory Aggressive behavior is
    instinctual (unlearned and universal)
  • Current trend is against humans having an
    instinct for aggression
  • Neural influences
  • Prefrontal cortex is smaller and less active
    among certain aggressive groups
  • Genetic influences
  • Our inherited tendencies to respond to
    environmental stimuli seem to be related to
    aggressive behavior
  • Certain animals (e.g., pit bulls) are bred for
    their aggressiveness
  • Biochemical influences
  • Testosterone and alcohol lead to aggression

9
Alcohol and Aggression
  • Alcohol enhances aggressiveness by reducing
    self-awareness and ability to consider
    consequences
  • Violent people are more likely (1) to drink and
    (2) to become aggressive when intoxicated
  • More than half of rapists report drinking prior
    to their crimes (McDonald et al., 2000)
  • 65 of homicides and 55 of domestic altercations
    involved alcohol (APA, 1993)

10
Central Park Mob (2000)
11
Aggression as a Response to Frustration
  • Frustration-Aggression Hypothesis
  • The theory that aggression is an automatic
    response to any blocking of goal-directed
    behavior (ex. road rage)
  • This is designed to explain hostile aggression,
    not instrumental aggression
  • Displacement The redirection of aggression to a
    target other than the source of the frustration.
    Generally, the new target is a safer or more
    socially acceptable target
  • A man who hits his wife because he is angry at
    his boss

12
Deprivation and Frustration
  • Deprivation predicts aggression when individuals
    are frustrated by the gap between their
    expectations and their attainments
  • Relative deprivation the perception that one is
    less well off than others to whom one compares
    oneself
  • As television ownership became widespread, crime
    rates increased (possibly because people felt
    deprived relative to television characters)

13
Aggression as Learned Social Behavior
  • Aggressive behavior is often rewarded
  • An aggressive child who is able to intimidate
    other children will likely continue to be
    aggressive (Patterson et al., 1967)
  • Aggressive hockey players tend to score more
    goals and spend more time in the penalty box
    (McCarthy Kelly, 1978)
  • Canadian teenage hockey players whose fathers
    applaud aggressive play show the most aggressive
    behavior and attitudes (Ennis Zanna, 1991)
  • Terrorism Kill one, frighten ten thousand

14
Aggression as Learned Social Behavior
  • Social learning theory Behavior is learned
    through the observation of others as well as
    through the direct experience of rewards and
    punishments
  • We watch to see whether others are rewarded or
    punished for their behavior

15
Social Learning Theory
  • Bobo doll study (Bandura, 1961)
  • Nursery school children worked on an interesting
    art project while an adult in another part of the
    room attacked a Bobo doll
  • Pounds it with a mallet, hits it, kicks it,
    throws it
  • Yells sock him in the noseknock him downkick
    him
  • This lasts for about 10 minutes

16
Social Learning Theory
  • Children then go to another room with very
    attractive toys
  • After two minutes, the child is not allowed to
    play with the toys any longer because they must
    be saved for the other children
  • All the children were frustrated because they
    were not allowed to play with the very attractive
    toys
  • Children are then taken to a room with less
    attractive toys. Two of the toys are a Bobo doll
    and a mallet
  • What do you think these kids did with the Bobo
    doll and the mallet?

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20
Social Learning Theory
  • Children who saw the aggressive adult model were
    MANY TIMES MORE LIKELY TO ATTACK the Bobo doll
    with the mallet
  • Often repeating the exact words used by the adult
    model
  • Children who did not see the adult model attack
    the Bobo doll were EXTREMELY UNLIKELY to attack
    the doll
  • Observing aggressive behavior had lowered their
    inhibitions and taught them ways to aggress

21
Social Learning The Family
  • We observe aggressive models in everyday life
  • Physically aggressive children tend to have had
    physically punitive parents, who disciplined them
    by modeling aggression with screaming, slapping,
    and beating (Patterson et al., 1982)
  • This is passed from generation to generation
    (Bandura Walters, 1959 Straus Gelles, 1980)
  • Although most abused kids DO NOT become abusive
    parents, 30 do later abuse their own children
    (4x the population rate Kaufman Zigler, 1987
    Widom, 1989)

22
Social Learning The Media
  • Increased rates of violence and sexual coercion
    have coincided with increased media portrayals
  • Typical American child sees 200,000 acts of
    violence on TV by age 18 (Plagens et al., 1991)
  • By age 80, the average American would have spent
    approximately 10 years of their life watching
    TV!!!!!
  • Children who watch a lot of violent TV are more
    violent towards peers

23
Social Learning Television
  • High exposure to media violence is a major
    contributing cause of the high rate of violence
    in modern U.S. society (Craig Anderson
    testifying before the Senate)
  • Watching a lot of television appears to have the
    following influences
  • Desensitization to violence and graphic sexuality
  • Altered perceptions (e.g., the world is a violent
    place)
  • Cognitive priming

24
Violent Video Games
  • Playing violent video games is associated with a
    history of property destruction and fighting
  • Video Games (Anderson Dill, 2000)
  • Study 1 Correlation between amount of time
    playing violent video games and aggressive
    delinquent behavior .46
  • Explanations?

25
Violent Video Games
  • Study 2 Experiment
  • College students randomly assigned to play
    Wolfenstein (violent game) or Myst (nonviolent
    game) 3 times over a week
  • Then played a competitive game with another
    student (who could push button faster) and set
    level duration of noise blast other person
    would receive
  • Participants who played the violent video game
    used louder and longer noise blasts against their
    opponents

26
The Effects of Playing Violent Video Games
  • Compared with nonviolent games, violent games
  • Increase arousal
  • Increase aggressive thinking (e.g., people are
    more likely to guess that others will respond
    with violence)
  • Increase aggressive feelings
  • Increase aggressive behaviors

27
Watching Violence Magnifies Violent Inclinations
  • Movie-goers filled out an aggression
    questionnaire as they entered and left
  • a violent movie or
  • a nonviolent movie
  • Those choosing the violent movie were more
    aggressive to begin with
  • They became even more aggressive after watching
    the violent movie (Black Bevan, 1992)

28
Impact of Pornography on Aggression
  • Pornography Explicit sexual material
  • Some pornography depicts women as sexual objects
    and trivializes rape
  • Participants who viewed pornography
  • Became habituated
  • Recommended a lighter sentence for a rapist and
    were less supportive of the womens liberation
    movement
  • Had more negative attitudes toward women
  • More likely to say they would force a woman to
    perform sexual behaviors against their will and
    that they would commit rape if they were assured
    of not getting caught
  • Effects were especially strong for violent
    pornography

29
Exposure to Pornography
  • Repeated exposure to films featuring uncommitted
    sex tend to
  • Decrease attraction to ones partner
  • Increase acceptance of extramarital sex and of
    womens sexual submission to men
  • Increase men perceiving women in sexual terms
  • After viewing an aggressive-erotic film, college
    men delivered stronger shocks than
    beforeespecially to a woman (Donnerstein, 1980)
  • Could pornography (or other media) explain why
    studies of male college students find that about
    33 report they would rape a woman if they could
    be assured that they would not be caught
    (Malamuth, 1981)?

30
Other Influences on Aggression
  • Aversive Incidents
  • Arousal
  • Aggression Cues
  • Group Influences

31
Other Influences on Aggression
  • Aversive Incidents
  • Pain
  • Many species exhibit a pain-attack response in
    response to physical pain
  • Attacks
  • During a competitive game, participants received
    increasingly severe shocks from opponents and
    responded with their own escalating shocks
    (Ohbuchi Kambara, 1985)
  • Heat
  • Major league pitchers throwing more balls at
    batters
  • More aggressive horn-honking
  • Riots are more likely on hot days
  • Violent crimes are more likely during hot weather
  • Manipulating temperature causes greater
    irritability

32
Other Influences on Aggression
  • Arousal
  • Bodily arousal feeds emotional responses
  • Schachter Singer (1962) injected participants
    with adrenaline (which causes arousal). They told
    half the participants that the drug would produce
    symptoms of arousal and half were not told of the
    effects
  • Participants who were not told of the effects
    experienced stronger emotional reactions in
    response to confederates in the waiting room
    (more anger at a hostile person and more
    amusement at a funny person). Participants told
    of the effects did not have very strong
    reactions.
  • Different forms of arousal may amplify each other
    (e.g., heat and frustration)

33
Other Influences on Aggression
  • Aggression Cues
  • People give longer shocks if a rifle and a
    revolver (supposedly left over from another
    study) were in the room than when badminton
    rackets were present (Berkowitz LePage, 1967)
  • Guns may serve as primes for aggressive behavior
    and place additional distance between aggressor
    and victim
  • Those who have guns in their homes are 2.7 times
    more likely to be murdered (nearly always by a
    friend or family member Kellermann, 1993,
    1997)but there may be other differences between
    those who have guns and those who do not

34
Other Influences on Aggression
  • Group Influences
  • As a riot begins, aggressive acts spread quickly
    from the trigger event and normally law-abiding
    people may behave aggressively
  • Diffusion of responsibility
  • Deindividuation

35
Summary of Aggression Research
  • Increased aggression is predicted by
  • Males
  • Type A personalities
  • Alcohol use
  • Violence viewing
  • Anonymity
  • Provocation
  • The presence of weapons
  • Group interaction

36
Reducing Aggression
  • How can we reduce aggression?
  • Catharsis hypothesis the aggressive drive is
    reduced when one releases aggressive energy,
    either by acting aggressively or by fantasizing
    aggression
  • Catharsis does not appear to occurrather,
    individuals become more violent after watching
    aggressive programming

37
Reducing Aggression
  • Social Learning Approach
  • Reward cooperative, nonaggressive behavior
  • Punish aggressive behavior (less consistently
    effectivemay only work under ideal
    circumstances)
  • Model and reward sensitivity and cooperation from
    an early age
  • Reduce exposure to media portrayals of violence
    (and inoculate children against unavoidable
    exposure)
  • Reducing the availability of aggressive
    instruments and primes (e.g., handguns)
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