Social Psychology 12e- Myers/Twenge Chapter 10
arousal
A given state of bodily arousal feeds one emotion or another, depending on how the person interprets and labels the arousal
neural influences of aggression
Abnormal brains can contribute to abnormally aggressive behavior. prefrontal cortex is 14% less active than normal in murderers.
instrumental aggression
Aggression that aims to injure, but only as a means to some other end.
hostile aggression
Aggression that springs from anger; its goal is to injure.
Elements of Hostile Aggression
An aversive situation can trigger aggression by provoking hostile cognitions, hostile feelings, and arousal. These reactions make us more likely to perceive harmful intent and to react aggressively.
instinctive
An innate, unlearned behavior pattern exhibited by all members of a species.
increased aggression is predicted by:
Being male Aggressive or anger-prone personalities Alcohol use Violence viewing Anonymity Provocation The presence of weapons Group interaction
social scripts
Culturally provided mental instructions for how to act in various situations.
catharsis
Emotional release. The catharsis view of aggression is that the aggressive drive is reduced when one "releases" aggressive energy, either by acting aggressively or by fantasizing aggression.
Temperaments
How intense and reactive we are
physical aggression
Hurting someone else's body.
social aggression
Hurting someone else's feelings or threatening their relationships. Sometimes called relational aggression, it includes cyberbullying and some forms of in-person bullying.
Which of the following has been found to be an effect of sexual violence in movies and television?
Men have become more accepting of violence against women.
aggression
Physical or verbal behavior intended to hurt someone.
prosocial behavior
Positive, constructive, helpful social behavior; the opposite of antisocial behavior
Rape myth
Some women would welcome sexual assault and that "no doesn't really mean no"
frustration
The blocking of goal-directed behavior.
The Social Learning View of Aggression
The emotional arousal stemming from an aversive experience motivates aggression. Whether aggression or some other response actually occurs depends on what consequences we have learned to expect.
relative deprivation
The perception that one is less well off than others with whom one compares oneself.
frustration aggression theory
The theory that frustration triggers a readiness to aggress.
social learning theory
The theory that we learn social behavior by observing and imitating and by being rewarded and punished.
rewards of aggression
Through experience and by observing others, we learn that aggression often pays
warrior gene (MAOA)
Violence gene
aggression cues
Violence is more likely when aggressive cues release pent-up anger
moral imperatives
a collective mentality (including images, rhetoric, and ideology) that mobilizes a group or a culture for extraordinary actions
Jason instigates more and more fights with younger children on the school playground because it gains him the attention and respect of his friends. This most clearly suggests that his aggression is
a learned response
The correlation between parental (father) absence and violence holds
across race, status, and education.
repeated violent video game playing increases
aggressive beliefs and attitudes aggressive perceptions aggressive expectations aggressive behavior scripts aggressive desensitization greater likelihood to carry a weapon decreases in self-control increases in anti-social behavior decrease helping behavior decrease empathy for others All of which increase aggressive personality
biochemical influences of aggression
alcohol, testosterone, biology and behavior interact
Which of the following has NOT been linked with aggressive behavior according to your text?
an unexpected request
Group influences on aggression
can amplify aggressive reactions partly by diffusing responsibility.
"Watching violence on television gives people a harmless opportunity to vent their aggression." This statement is most clearly consistent with the _______ hypothesis.
catharsis
The _______ view of aggression is that aggressive drive is reduced when one "releases" aggressive energy.
cathartic
Groups can amplify aggressive reactions partly by
diffusing responsibility.
Repeated exposure to fictional scenes of a man overpowering and arousing a woman
distorted people's perceptions of how women actually respond to sexual coercion.
genetic influences
hereditary influences the neural systems sensitivity to aggressive cues.
Absolute deprivation
lacking what others have
examples of aversive incidents
pain heat attacks frustration insults overcrowding
displacement
re-directing unacceptable feelings such as anger toward a less threatening person or object.
Bradshaw's books on "reclaiming your inner child" suggest techniques that are consistent with what social psychologists call
the cathartic effect.
Cyberbullying
the use of electronic communication to bully a person, typically by sending messages of an intimidating or threatening nature.
The near consensus among social psychologists is that
viewing or participating in violence fails to produce catharsis.