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What Is Aggression?

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What Is Aggression? Any form of behavior directed toward the goal of harming or injuring another living being who is motivated to avoid such treatment. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What Is Aggression?


1
What IsAggression?
Any form of behavior directed toward the goal of
harming or injuring another living being who is
motivated to avoid such treatment. (Baron and
Richardson, 1994)
2
Criteria for Aggression (Violence)
Aggression is a behavior.
Aggression involves harm or injury.
Aggression is directed toward another living
organism (who doesnt want pain).
Aggression involves intent to harm. Aggression
usually involves norm violation
assertiveness vs. violence
3
Types of Aggression http//www.youtube.com/watch
?vLF6Skj7WGoM
Hostile or reactive aggression

Instrumental aggression
4
(No Transcript)
5
Spectator Aggression
associated with
small-scale, on-the-field aggressive acts
aroused conditions
alcohol use and
younger, disadvantaged male spectators (e.g.,
soccer gangs).
6
Aggression in Sport
Game reasoning and aggression
Many athletes view aggression as inappropriate in
general but appropriate in the sport environment.
This is called ________________________________
7
Aggression in Sport
Athletic performance and aggression
No clear pattern has been found, but
professionals must decide if they value winning
at all costs at the cost of increased aggression.
8
Causes of Aggression
Instinct Theory
Individuals have an innate instinct to be
aggressive, which builds up until it must be
expressed (directly or via catharsis). no
support in sport variant athletes have too
much testosterone
9
Causes of Aggression
FrustrationAggression Theory
Frustration causes aggression. no support
10
Causes of Aggression
Social Learning Theory
Aggression is learned through observing others
(modeling) and then having similar behavior
reinforced. supported rivalry and retaliation
11
Causes of Aggression
Revised FrustrationAggression Theory
Combines elements of the frustration-aggression
theory with the social learning
theory. supported
12
Causes of Aggression
13
Implications for Practice
Recognize when aggression is most likely to
occurwhen individuals are frustrated and
aroused, often because they





14
Implications for Practice
Control aggression via stress or
emotional-management training (logs ABCs etc..)
Keep winning in perspective.
Distinguish between aggression (VIOLENCE) and
assertive or intense play.
Teach nonviolent conflict resolution skills.
Teach appropriate behavior.
(continued)
15
Implications for Practice
Control spectator aggression.
Develop strict alcohol-control policies.
1.
Immediately penalize spectators for aggressive
actslegal charges?
2.
Hire officials who dont tolerate aggression.
3.
Inform coaches that aggression wont be
tolerated.
4.
Work with media not to glorify aggressive acts.
(no coverage)
5.
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