Created by andreaarose
about 11 years ago
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Question | Answer |
Physical aggression | Aggression inflicting physical pain |
Verbal/relational aggression | Saying or doing psychologically hurtful things |
Hostile aggression | Aggressive behaviour that stems from anger and has the goal of inflicting pain |
Instrumental aggression | Aggressive behaviour that inflicts pain. |
Kin selection | Behaviours that help a genetic relative are favoured. |
Inclusive fitness | We choose mates that survive and help us survive. |
Amygdala | Stimulating the amygdala can lead to aggression. |
Prefrontal cortex | Regulates aggressive impulses, involved in planning and behavioural regulation. |
Testosterone | Injecting testosterone does not increase aggression. |
Serotonin | Inhibits aggressive impulses. |
Alcohol | 65% of homicides and 55% of domestic violence involves alcohol. It disinhibits behaviour. |
Frustration aggression theory | Aggression stems from frustration. Not all aggression is the result of frustration. |
Relative deprivation | Feelings of discontent aroused by the belief that one fares poorly compared to others. |
Neo associationism | Aversive events cause anger. Aggressive stimuli triggers aggressive behaviour - the Gun study. |
Social learning theory | "I did what anyone else would do" |
Vicarious learning | Learning through observation of others behaviour. |
Social modelling of aggression | We learn aggression from observing others and imitating them. |
Bobo doll experiment | Physically aggressive children are more likely to have punitive parents. |
TV and aggression | Violent TV watching at 8 predicted aggression at age 19. |
Desensitization | Reduction in emotion related physiological reactivity in response to a stimulus. |
Cultivation | Process by which the mass media constructs a version of social reality for the public. |
Intimate violence | Aggression between intimates - date rape, domestic violence. |
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