Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Aggression
- Social Learning Theory
- According to Berkwitz and
Bandura, aggressive behaviour in
non-human animals can be
explained in terms of instinctual
drives, however, aggression in
humans is the product of learning
- They claim that this
behaviour is either
learned via direct
experience or
observation
- Learning by direct experience is derived from Skinner's principles of
operant reinforcement.
- Learning by observation is vicarious
reinforcement.
- The main study related to the SLT of aggression is Bandura's (1963) Bobo doll experiment.
66 nursery children were put into three groups. All three groups watched a video of an adult
hitting Bobo doll. Condition 1- saw the adult model being rewarded by a second adult.
Condition 2- children saw adult model being told off by second adult. Condition 3- the adult
model was neither rewarded or punished
- The children were then allowed to play in
the room with Bobo doll. The results showed
that children in condition 1 behaved most
aggressively whereas children in condition 2
behaved least aggressively.
- From this experiment, Bandura was able to construct a model of the way children
process behaviour: Children observe aggressive behaviour --> The model is rewarded
for aggressive behaviour --> Other adults show approval of model's aggressive
behaviour --> Other children imitate the behaviour of the model.
- SLT leads us to consider the various ways in which
children my be exposed to aggressive behaviour. The
main way is Television. Huesmann (1988) suggests that
children may use TV models as a sourse of scripts that
can act as a guide for their own behaviour. These
scripts are stored in memory, strengthened through
repetition and rehearsal.
- This appears to be influenced by several factors which
Manstead et al (1995) constructed suggesting that aggressive
behaviour is more likely to occur: If the observed violence is
thought to be real behaviour; If viewers can empathise with
the aggressor in some way; If aggression is motivated by
desire or revenge; If aggressive behaviour is justified
- Defining aggression
- Anti-social aggression- defined by Penrod
(1983) as 'all behaviour that is intended to
inflict psysical or psychological harm on
another individual who does not want to be so
treated
- Pro-social aggression- when
an aggressive act is carried
out for the greater good of the
people e.g. a policeman
shooting a terrorist
- Sanctioned aggression- when an
aggressive act is taken in self
defence.
- Biological explanation for aggression
- Higher levels of male hormone Testosterone is said
to be linked to aggressive behaviour. In addition,
Premenstrual syndrome for women has also been
associated with aggression as Flanagan (2000)
found that women in criminal trials suffered from this
- In humans, evidence for
genetic link to
aggression come with
twin studies and
adoption studies.
- A twin study into aggression conducted by Christiansen (1977):
a concordance analysis of 3586 pairs of twins born between 1881
and 1910 in a region of Denmark were used. From this sample,
926 individuals were registered by the police for criminal activity.
MZ and DZ twins were compared.
- Male MZ twins showed 35% concordance for criminality,
compared to the 12% concordance shown between DZ
twins. However, due to the fact that for MZ twins the
concordance rate was not 100% despite sharing genes, it
suggests that it is not down to genetics. There may have
been environmental factors.
- An adoption study into aggression was constructed by
Mednick et al (1984). They to did a concordance analysis
of 14,427 Danish adoptees. Rates of concordance for
criminality between the adoptees and adopted and
biological parents.
- Results showed that 13.5% of adoptees with parents (adopt
and biological) without criminal conviction had criminal
conviction themselves, compared to 14.7% of adoptees with at
least one criminal convicted biological parent. However, if the
adoptee had one criminal convicted adoptive parent and one
criminal convicted biological parent, the rate went up to 24.5%
- Areas of the Brain have been linked to aggression which
include the Temporal lobe and the limbic system. One part of
the Limbic system is the Amygdala, has been found to have a
strong connection to aggression. Animal studies have shown
that an electrical stimulation of different parts of the amygdala
can either cause or reduce aggression. There is some
evidence that the amygdala has a link in human aggression
too. Charles Whitman, a sniper who killed 14 innocent people
and wounded 31 others asked to have his brain destroyed after
death. An autopsy revealed that he had a temporal lobe
tumour, pressing on his amygdala.
- Deindividuation
- Hogg and Vaughan (1998) define deindividuation as: 'a process
whereby people lose their sense of socialized individual identity and
engage in un-socialized, often anti-social behaviour.
- According to Zimbardo, being part of a crowd can diminish
awareness of individuality. In a large crowd, each person is faceless
and anonymous. There is diminished fear of retribution and a diluted
sense of guilt. The larger the group, the greater the anonymity and a
greater difficulty in identifying a single individual.
- The concept of deindividuation can
also be applied to the victim of
aggression.
- Milgram (1965) found that participants were more likely to administer higher levels of
shock when they could not see the victim. When the victim was in the room, the
participants were more reluctant to give the higher shocks to someone they could
seee (or could see them)
- Environmental factors
- Temperature
- Noise
- Crowding
- Evolutionary Explanations of aggression
- Group Displays of aggression
- Group behaviour can be an adaptive advantage for individuals within
a group, explaining why they are more common in social situations.
- Xenophobia is the hatred or fear of foreigners or
strangers. Within sports crowds where natural
selection prefers genes that cause human beings to
be altruistic towards members of their own group, yet
intolerant of outsiders as the over-estimating of the
treat is less costly than under-estimating it.
- Foldesi (1996) suggests that there is a link
between sports displays and xenophobia. He
discovered that racist chants and banners from
extreamist supporters among Hungarian football
crowds, led to an increase in spectator violence in
general. However, it was particularly aimed at
gypsies and Jews who did not meet social norms.
- Jealousy is aggression to deter a partner's infidelity.
- A survey by Kinsey (1948), 50% of
married men and 26% of married women
reported having had sex with somebody
else while married. Infidelity can be
seen as an evolutionary adaptive
strategy
- Indications that a partner is being unfaithful
often lead to jealous rage. Jealousy has been
explained as a product of evolution, although
this response is triggered differently in each
sex
- Institutional aggression
- The Importation model by Irwin and Cressey implies
that inmates in prison import their social histories and
traits into prison with them. This in turn influences
their adaptation to their new environment, suggesting
that prisoners more aggressive outside the prison are
likely to be more aggressive inside.
- The Deprivation model suggests that
aggression in prisons and other institutions is
the result of stressful and oppressive
conditions inside the institution itself. It may
be argued that the aggression is stemmed
from deprivation of liberty, lack of goods,
deprived of heterosexual relationships and
absence of ample security.