Chapter 10 Terms Social Psychology and Human Nature 3e
Proactive aggression (instrumental agression)
"cold", premeditated, calculated harmful behavior that is a means to some practical or material end
Reactive aggression (hostile aggression)
"hot", impulsive, angry behavior motivated by a desire to harm someone
Flight or flight syndrome
a response to stress that involves aggressing against others or turning away
Tend and befriend syndrome
a response to stress that involves nurturing others and making friends
Deindividuation
a sense of anonymity and loss of individually a in a large group, making people especially likely to engage in antisocial behaviors such as theft
Culture of honor
a society that places high value on individual respect, strength, and virtue, and accepts and justified violent action in response to threats to one's honor
Humiliation
a state of disgrace or loss of self-respect (or of respect from others)
Running amok
according to Malaysian culture, refers to the behavior of a young man who becomes uncontrollably violent after receiving a blow to his ego
Violence
aggression that has as its goal extreme physical harm, such as injury or death
Cocaine
an addictive stimulant drug obtained from the leaves of the coca plant
Instinct
an innate (inborn, biologically programmed) tendency to seek a particular goal, such as food, water, or sex
Aggression
any behavior intended to harm another person who is motivated to avoid the harm
Displaced aggression
any behavior that intentionally harms a substitute target rather than the provocateur
Indirect aggression
any behavior that intentionally harms another person who is physically absent
Direct aggression
any behavior that intentionally harms another person who is physically present
Antisocial behaivor
behavior that either damages interpersonal relationships or is culturally undesireablw
Relationshioal aggression (social aggression)
behavior that involves internally harming another person's social relationships, feelings of acceptance, or inclusion within a group
Frustration
blockage of or the interference with a personal goal
Eros
in Freudian theory, the destructive, death instinct
Honor killing
killing another individual who has brought "dishonor" to the family
Descriptive norms
norms that specify what most people do
Injunctive norms
norms that specify when most others approve or disapprove of
Modeling
observing and copying or imitating the behavior or others
Bullying
persistent aggression by a perpetrator against a victim for the purpose of establishing a power relationship over the victim
Frustration-aggression hypothesis
proposal that "the occurrence of aggressive behavior always presupposes the existence of frustration" and "the existence of frustration always leads to some form of aggression"
Broken window theory
proposal that sings of disorder such as broken windows induce other antisocial behaivor
Norms
social standard that prescribe what people ought to do
Taboo words
socially unacceptable words such as profanity or swear words: speech that constitutes sexual harassment or discrimination, hate speech, and verbally abusive words
Seratonin
the "feel good" neurotransmitter, low levels of which have been linked to aggression and violence in both animals and humans
Weapons effect
the increase in aggression that occurs as a mere result of the presence of a weapon
Testosterone
the male sec hormone, high levels of which have been linked to aggression and violence in both animals and humans
Density
the number of people in a given area
Crowing
the subjective and unpleasant feeling that there are too many people in a given area
Hostile expectation bias
the tendency to assume that people will react to potential conflicts with aggression
Hostile attributional bias
the tendency to perceive ambiguous actions by others as aggressive
Hostile perception bias
the tendency to perceive social interactions in general as being aggressive
Psychological reactance
the unpleasant emotional response people experience when someone is trying to restrict their freedom to engage in a desired behaivor
Cyberbullying
the use of the internet to bully others
Plagiarize
to claim the ideas or words of another person as one's own without crediting that person
Identity theft
using someones personal information in order to obtain money from their bank accounts
Domestic violence (family violence, intimate-partner violence)
violence that occurs within the home or family, between people who have a close relationship with each other