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Chapter 9: Aggression

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Title: Chapter 9: Aggression


1
Chapter 9 Aggression
  • What is Aggression?
  • a. Types of Aggression
  • Aggression as a Social Judgment
  • Developmental Trends in Aggression
  • Sex Differences
  • Family Influences
  • Controlling Aggression

2
1. What is aggression?
  • Two basic definitions
  • Behavioral action that delivers noxious stimulus
    to another organism
  • Intentional action intended to harm or injured
    another who is motivated to avoid

3
1. What is aggression?
  • Types of aggression
  • Hostile actions for which the major goal is to
    harm or injure a victim
  • Instrumental major goal is to gain access to
    objects, space, or privileges
  • Relational acts aimed at damaging self-esteem,
    friendship, or social status

4
2. Aggression as a social judgment
  • Reasons behind acts are often considered in our
    judgments of aggression
  • As are gender, age, whether someone was hurt
  • And our own beliefs affect this as well

5
Example
  • Condry and Ross (1985)
  • Showed videotapes of rough-and-tumble play in
    snow (snowsuits)
  • Participants told both boys, both girls, one boy
    and one girl
  • Asked to rate amount of aggression and extent to
    which behavior was just active, playful, and
    affectionate

6
Ratings of aggressiveness of target childs
behavior as a function of gender
Aggression ratings
Sex of recipient
7
Ratings of affection of target childs behavior
as a function of gender
Affection ratings
Sex of recipient
8
3. Developmental trends
  • Early conflicts (age 2)
  • Incompatible needs, desires, or goals
  • Preschool aggression
  • Form changes over time
  • 2 to 3 year olds more likely to kick or hit
  • Older preschoolers tease, taunt, call names
  • Increasing percentage of hostile acts
  • Overall, aggression declines over the preschool
    period. It is fairly high early on and then
    declines.

9
3. Developmental trends
  • Elementary school
  • Hostile aggression increases slightly, esp. in
    boys
  • Children are capable of knowing whether acts were
    intentional or not
  • But aggressive children are more likely to see
    unintentional acts as intentional

10
3. Developmental trends
  • Adolescence
  • Aggression decreases overall
  • BUT, the most violent adolescents increase their
    physical aggression

11
3. Developmental trends
  • Stability of aggression
  • Mean number of criminal convictions by age 30

Age-8 aggression group
12
4. Sex differences
  • Biological viewpoint
  • Males more aggressive than females in almost
    every society studied.
  • --On overt aggression

13
How girls are more aggressive than boys
  • Relational aggression in girls
  • Withdraw acceptance
  • Exclude girl from social network, snub
  • Spread rumors
  • Goal is often to damage status, self-esteem,
    friendships
  • Boys Hit or insult

14
4. Sex differences
  • Biological viewpoint
  • Males more aggressive than females in almost
    every society studied.
  • --On overt aggression
  • Differences emerge early (by 24-36 mos.)
  • Males are more aggressive in our closest primate
    relatives
  • Testosterone linked to aggression

15
4. Sex differences
  • Social learning viewpoint
  • Critical of biological theory
  • Some studies show that girls are more aggressive
  • E.g., more aggressive disputes among 1-year-olds
    when groups dominated by girls (Caplan et al.
    1991)

16
Social learning
  • Parents play rougher with boys
  • React more negatively to aggression from girls
  • Toys given to boys may promote aggression
  • During preschool, children build a gender schema
    that includes aggression as a trait in of males
  • Middle childhood boys expect aggressive acts to
    provide them with more tangible benefits

17
5. Dodges Social Information Processing theory
  • Children take information processing steps
  • Encode social cues
  • Interpret social cues
  • Formulate social goals
  • Generate problem solving strategies
  • Evaluate the likely effectiveness of strategies
    and select a response
  • Enact a response

18
5. Dodges Social Information Processing theory
  • Children take information processing steps
  • After all the steps are taken, the peer evaluates
    the response and may then respond.
  • The childs info-proc. is based on his/her mental
    state
  • Past social experiences
  • Social expectancies
  • Knowledge of social rules
  • Emotionality/emotional regulation skills

19
5. Dodges Social Information Processing theory
  • Children who are reactive aggressors are likely
    to believe that others are hostile to them.
  • Hostile attributional bias
  • Found equally in girls and boys
  • () This theory is useful because it goes beyond
    cognitive interpretations of the situation into
    childrens mental states and biases.
  • (-) Does not explain why children are aggressive
    or non-aggressive children, or how aggressive
    children developed biases in the first place.

20
6. Family influences
  • Power-assertive discipline
  • Adults relies on power administering spanking or
    withholding privileges
  • Bad combination parents cold, rejecting, and
    erratic in discipline, and they allow children to
    express aggressive impulses. raise aggressive
    children
  • Cold, rejecting parents model aloofness and a
    lack of concern for others.
  • Child acts out, but adult often ignores.
  • When adults finally spank the child, they are
    reinforcing the behavior they want to suppress.

21
6. Family influences
  • Parental conflict
  • Children become distressed
  • Also, children may see that aggression is a tool
    to getting what they want
  • Children who witness conflict (but are not
    victims) are more likely to become proactive
    aggressors.
  • Children who are also victims are likely to
    distrust others and be reactively aggressive.

22
6. Family influences
  • Coercive home environments (Patterson)
  • Family members bicker, not a lot of intimacy
  • More threat, needling, irritation
  • Negative reinforcement
  • When stim. is removed as consequence of the act,
    increases probability of recurrence of act.
  • E.g., one family member makes another scream,
    whine, tease, or hit, forcing antagonist to stop.

23
6. Family influences
  • Negative reinforcement
  • 1. Girl teases brother, who yells at her to
    stop. (- reinf. yelling)
  • 2. Girls calls brother nasty name, and brother
    chases her and hits her.
  • 3. Girls stops calling him names (- reinf.
    hitting), whimpers and hits him back, and he
    withdraws. Boy then hits sister again,
    escalating conflict.
  • 4. Mother intervenes but may apply punitive and
    coercive tactics to make them stop fighting.
  • 5. Kids stop fighting (reinforces mom for using
    coercive tactics), but then whine or yell at mom.
    If mom backs off, she is reinforcing the
    countercoercive techniques.
  • Related to chronic delinquency

24
7. Controlling aggression
  • Better to reward prosocial behaviors
  • Catharsis hypothesis
  • Blowing off steam doesnt work
  • Kids become no less aggressive afterwards
  • Create a nonaggressive environment
  • Eliminate payoffs
  • Empathy training
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