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PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS IN AGGRESSION

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Title: PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS IN AGGRESSION


1
PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS IN AGGRESSION
  • The nature and nurture of aggression

2
Aggression Defined
  • Intentional behavior aimed at causing either
    physical or psychological harm
  • Contrast aggression and assertiveness
  • Hostile vs. Instrumental Aggression
  • Hostile stems from a feeling of anger. Goal is
    to inflict pain or injury.
  • Instrumental aggression takes place as a means
    to some other goal (e.g., professional assassin)

3
Is Aggression an Instinct?
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • French Philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau
    (1712-1778) blames society, not human nature, for
    social evils.

4
Is Aggression an Instinct?
  • Thomas Hobbes
  • English Philosopher Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
    sees societys laws as necessary to restrain and
    control the human brute.

5
Is Aggression an Instinct?
  • Inborn
  • Instinctual
  • In the last century, brutish viewthat
    aggressive drive is inborn and thus
    inevitablewas argued by Sigmund Freud and Konrad
    Lorenz.
  • Both agreed that that aggressive energy is
    instinctual (unlearned and universal)
  • If not discharged, it builds up until it explodes

6
Is Aggression an Instinct?
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Freud speculated that human aggression springs
    from a self-destructive impulse
  • It redirects toward others the energy of a
    primitive death urge (death instinct)

7
Is Aggression an Instinct?
  • Konrad Lorenz
  • An animal behavior expert, he saw aggression as
    adaptive rather than self-destructive

8
Influences of Aggression
9
Neural Influences
  • Researchers have found neural systems in both
    animals and humans that facilitate aggression
  • When scientists activate these areas in the
    brain, hostility increases when they deactivated
    them, hostility decreases.
  • The prefrontal cortex acts like an emergency
    brake on deeper brain areas involved in
    aggressive behavior.

10
Neural Influences
  • In one experiment, researchers placed an
    electrode in an aggression-inhibiting area of a
    domineering monkeys brain. One small monkey,
    given the button that activated the electrode,
    learned to push it everytime the tyrant monkey
    became intimidating.
  • In human, after a woman receives electrical
    stimulation in her amygdala (a part of the brain
    core), the woman became enraged and smashed her
    guitar against the wall.

11
Genetic Influences
  • Heredity influence the neural systems
    sensitivity to aggressive cues.
  • Animals can be bred for aggressive purposes, as
    in cock fighting or dog fighting (Mike Vick/Pit
    bulls)
  • Our temperaments are partly brought with us in
    the world, influenced by our sympathetic nervous
    system.

12
Utility of Aggression
  • Method One Socially aggressive physical
    activities (e.g., football)
  • Neither participating or watching these sports
    decreases aggressive behavior (in fact, watching
    temporarily increases aggression).

13
Utility of Aggression
  • Method Two Fantasy
  • Utility is limited it reduces some, but not a
    lot of aggression
  • Method Three Direct Aggression. Does lashing
    out help to reduce future aggression
  • Apparently not. Actually seems to increase
    future aggression
  • Cognitive Dissonance. Blaming the victim.
  • Only reduces future aggression if equity has been
    restored.

14
Blood Chemistry
  • Levels of various substances in the blood can
    provide clues to a patient's condition and
    aggression
  • When people are provoked, alcohol unleashes
    aggression
  • Violent people are more likely to drink and to
    become aggressive when intoxicated
  • Aggressiveness also correlates with the male sex
    hormone, testosterone
  • Testosterone levels are high among prisoners
    convicted of unprovoked violent crimes than of
    non-violent crimes

15
Psychological Influences
16
Psychological Influences
Frustration always leads to some form of
aggression.
The classic frustration-aggression theory
(Dollard others. 1989 Miller, 1941)
  • Frustration is anything (such as the
    malfunctioning vending machine) that blocks our
    attaining goal.
  • It grows when our motivation to achieve a goal is
    very strong, when we expected gratification, and
    when the blocking is complete.

17
Psychological Influences
Operant Conditioning (B.F. Skinner)
  • If after performing an aggressive act an animal
    or human receives a positive reinforcement (such
    as food or a toy), they are likely to repeat the
    behavior in order to gain more rewards.
  • In this way, the aggressive act becomes
    positively associated with the reward, which
    encourages the further display of aggression.

18
Psychological Influences
Social Learning Theory/Observational Learning
(Albert Bandura)
  • Aggression is initially learned from social
    behavior and it is maintained by other
    conditions 
  • Aggressive responses can also be acquired through
    social modeling or social reference.
  • Everyday life exposes us to aggressive models in
    the family.
  • Social environment outside the home provides
    models.
  • Bandura contended that aggressive acts are
    motivated by a variety of aversive
    experiencesfrustration, pain, insults.

19
Environmental Influences
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21
Painful Accidents
  • Pain heightens aggressiveness in individuals.
  • Leonard Berkowitz and his associates demonstrated
    aggressiveness by having students hold one hand
    in lukewarm water or painfully cold water.
  • Those whose hands were submerged in the cold
    water reported feeling more irritable and more
    annoyed, and they were more willing to blast
    another person with unpleasant noise
  • Berkowitz concluded that aversive stimulation
    rather than frustration is the basic trigger of
    hostile aggression.

22
Painful Accidents
  • But any aversive event, whether dashed
    expectation, a personal insult, or physical pain,
    can incite an emotional outburst
  • Even the torment of a depressed state increases
    the likelihood of hostile aggressive behavior

23
Heat
  • An uncomfortable environment heightens aggressive
    tendencies.
  • Offensive odors, cigarette smoke, and air
    pollution have all been linked with aggressive
    behavior (But heat is the most-studied
    environmental irritant.
  • William Griffit (1970) found that compared to
    students who answered questionnaires in a room
    with a normal temperature, those who did so in an
    uncomfortable hot room reported feeling more
    tired and aggressive, and experienced more
    hostility.
  • Follow-up experiments revealed that heat also
    triggers retaliative actions

24
Attacks
  • Being attacked or insulted by another is
    especially conducive to aggression.
  • Experiments confirm that intentional attacks
    breed retaliatory attacks.

25
Crowding
  • The subjective feeling of not having enough
    spaceis stressful
  • Crammed in the back of the bus, trapped in a slow
    moving freeway traffic, or living three to a
    small room in a college dorm diminishes ones
    sense of control
  • The stress experienced by animals allowed to
    overpopulate a confirmed environment that
    heighten aggressiveness

26
Effects of Overcrowding

Example 1Swimming Pool in China
27
Effects of Overcrowding

Example 2California Department of Corrections
28
Effects of Overcrowding

Example 3American Freeways
29
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30
Color
  • Research demonstrates that room color does not
    have much of an impact
  • However, uniform color has been demonstrated to
    be related to an increase in penalties received
    (in both football and hockey)
  • Does wearing a color make you more aggressive or
    are referees more likely to interpret ambiguous
    situations as aggressive?

31
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32
Social Learning and Media
  • Idea of learning from aggressive models
  • TV is full of violent models
  • High correlation between the amount of TV watched
    and viewers subsequent aggression this data is
    deemed to be correlational
  • Psychological research has demonstrated that
    viewing TV violence can numb peoples reactions
    when they are faced with real-life aggression

33
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34
Why Does Media Violence Affect Us?
  • Ideas in psych research has four themes
  • Seeing others being aggressive weakens our
    learned inhibitions against violence.
  • Learn techniques imitate.
  • Primes our anger, more aware of our anger
  • Desensitization to violence.

35
Can We Reduce Violence?
  • Inconclusive as many remedies ineffective.
  • More Punishment for violent offenders?
  • More effective when applied in the context of a
    warm relationship
  • Overly restrictive punishments are frustrating,
    which can lead to even more aggression/violence
  • What does that say about prison? Think about the
    Stanford Prison Study (Zimbardo).
  • Moderate vs. severe punishment combined with
    cognitive dissonance.

36
Can We Reduce Violence?
  • Punishment of aggressive models? (public
    floggings, death penalty, etc.)
  • Death penalty does not decrease homicide rate in
    a country.
  • In lab research seeing an aggressive model
    punished does not reduce future aggression
    (seeing them rewarded does increase aggression
    however.)
  • Presence of non-aggressive models?
  • Remember, we often conform to others when we seek
    out information on how to act

37
Soccer Not Life and Death Folks
38
Causes of Aggression
  • Alcohol
  • 75 of individuals arrested for crimes of
    violence were legally drunk at the time of their
    arrests.
  • Experimental evidence implies that alcohol
    ingestion increases aggression
  • Alcohol is a disinhibitor. Under the influence
    of alcohol a persons primary tendencies are
    revealed

39
Causes of Aggression
  • Pain and Discomfort
  • An animal experiences pain and cant flee,
    violence follows
  • Research has been done on heat/temperature and
    the links to violent behavior.
  • Violent crime and aggression increases as
    temperature increases (e.g., temperatures above
    90 and fighting)
  • Conflict is increased during interaction as it
    gets warmer
  • Lab research suggests that temperature is the key
    component

40
Causes of Aggression
  • Frustration
  • Thwarting an individuals attainment of a goal
    increases the probability of an aggressive
    response
  • Frustration becomes greater the closer one gets
    to a goal, and if interruption is unexpected or
    illegitimate
  • Key seems to be relative deprivation not just
    deprivation
  • Revolutions are not begun by people with their
    faces in the mud, but people who have recently
    lifted their faces out of the mud and have had
    time to look around

41
Controlling/Eliminating Aggression
  • Introduce incompatible responsesfor example
    certain emotional response such as empathy and
    humor are incompatible with aggression.
  • Purposely making a joke or showing some sympathy
    for the other persons point of view can greatly
    reduce anger and frustration.

42
What Causes This Behavior?
43
WHY???
44
Causes of Aggression
  • Neurological and Chemical Causes
  • Amygdala (located in the forebrain).
  • Testosterone leads to an increase in
    aggression, but also increases during aggression
  • If testosterone is linked to aggression, does
    this mean that men are more aggressive than
    women?
  • Across cultures, women demonstrate less violence
  • During era of women's liberation, non-violent
    crime rate relative to male rate has increased,
    but not violent crime rate.

45
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46
How to Reduce Aggression
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