Frage 1
Frage
Difficult to operationally define at it is partly shaped by societal and cultural norms.
Antworten
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Aggression (p. 471-472)
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Biosocial Theoretical Positions (p. 476)
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Frustration-aggression hypothesis (p. 477)
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Learning by vicarious experience (p. 479)
Frage 2
Frage
What are some proposed definitions for aggression?
Antworten
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Behaviour resulting in personal injury or destruction of property
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Behaviour intended to harm another of the same species
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Intentional infliction of some form of harm on others
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Desire to give all your love and affection to the dog instead of the friends you are visiting
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Eating all of the chocolate
Frage 3
Frage
Defines a theorietical term in a way that allows it to be manipulated.
Frage 4
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Innate drive or impulse, genetically transmitted.
Frage 5
Frage
Innate death instinct.
Antworten
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Thanatos (p. 422)
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Fighting instinct (p. 475)
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Frustration-aggression hypothesis (p. 477)
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Excitation-transfer model (p. 477)
Frage 6
Frage
Behaviour is genetically determined and is controlled by natural selection.
Antworten
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Ethology (p. 474)
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Evolutionary social psychology (p. 475-476)
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Biosocial Theoretical Positions (p. 476)
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Social learning theory (p. 478)
Frage 7
Frage
What are two compentents that contribute towards ethology?
Frage 8
Frage
Specific stimuli in the environment thought by ethologists to trigger aggressive responses.
Antworten
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Releasers (p. 474)
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Instinct (p. 474)
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Modelling (p. 480)
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Script (p. 480)
Frage 9
Frage
An extension of evolutionary psychology that views complex social behaviour as adaptive, helping the individual, kin and the species as a while to survive.
Frage 10
Frage
An extension of evolutionary psychology that views complex social behaviour as adaptive, helping the individual, kin and the species as a whole to survive.
Antworten
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Evolutionary social psychology (p. 475-476)
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Biosocial Theoretical Positions (p. 476)
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Social learning theory (p. 478)
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Attachment styles (p. 483)
Frage 11
Frage
In the context of aggression, theories that emphasise an innate component, though not the existence of a full-blown instinct.
Antworten
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Biosocial Theoretical Positions (p. 476)
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Social learning theory (p. 478)
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
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General Aggression Model (p. 492)
Frage 12
Frage
Through the biosocial theories view of instinct, what concepts share this view?
Antworten
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Frustration-aggression hypothesis (p. 477)
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Excitation-transfer model (p. 477)
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Learning by direct experience (p. 479)
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
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Sexual selection theory (p. 484)
Frage 13
Frage
Theory that all frustration leads to aggression, and all aggression comes from frustration. Used to explain prejudice and intergroup aggression.
Antworten
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Frustration-aggression hypothesis (p. 477)
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Excitation-transfer model (p. 477)
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Sociocultural theory (p. 484)
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Cathartic hypothesis (p. 484)
Frage 14
Frage
The expression of aggression is a function of learnt behaviour, some excitation from another source, and the person’s interpretation of the arousal state.
Antworten
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Excitation-transfer model (p. 477)
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Frustration-aggression hypothesis (p. 477)
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Social learning theory (p. 478)
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
Frage 15
Frage
The view championed by Bandura that human social behaviour is not innate but learnt from appropriate models.
Antworten
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Social learning theory (p. 478)
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Biosocial Theoretical Positions (p. 476)
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
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Sexual selection theory (p. 484)
Frage 16
Frage
Components of Social learning theory.
Antworten
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Learning by direct experience (p. 479)
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Learning by vicarious experience (p. 479)
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Relative deprivation (p. 493)
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Attachment styles (p. 483)
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Type A personality (p. 483)
Frage 17
Frage
Acquiring a behaviour because we were rewarded for it.
Frage 18
Frage
Acquiring a behaviour after observing that another person was rewarded for it.
Antworten
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Learning by vicarious experience (p. 479)
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Learning by direct experience (p. 479)
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Excitation-transfer model (p. 477)
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Script (p. 480)
Frage 19
Frage
Tendency for a person to reproduce the actions, attitudes and emotional responses exhibited by a real-life or symbolic model. Also called observational learning.
Frage 20
Frage
A schema about an event.
Antworten
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Script (p. 480)
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Instinct (p. 474)
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Ethology (p. 474)
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Personality
Frage 21
Frage
A sense of having less than we feel entitled to.
Antworten
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Relative deprivation (p. 493)
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
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Type A personality (p. 483)
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Dehumanisation (p. 488)
Frage 22
Frage
Sherif’s theory of intergroup conflict that explains intergroup behaviour in terms of the nature of goal relations between groups.
Antworten
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
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Social learning theory (p. 478)
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Biosocial Theoretical Positions (p. 476)
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Sociocultural theory (p. 484)
Frage 23
Frage
Descriptions of the nature of people’s close relationships, thought to be established in childhood.
Frage 24
Frage
The ‘coronary-prone’ personality – a behavioural correlate of heart disease characterised by striving to achieve, time urgency, competitiveness and hostility.
Frage 25
Frage
Psychological gender differences are determined by individuals’ adaptations to restrictions based on their gender in their society. Also called social role theory.
Antworten
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Sociocultural theory (p. 484)
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Sexual selection theory (p. 484)
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Cathartic hypothesis (p. 484)
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General Aggression Model (p. 492)
Frage 26
Frage
Sex differences in behaviour are determined by evolutionary history rather than society.
Antworten
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Sexual selection theory (p. 484)
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Sociocultural theory (p. 484)
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
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Social learning theory (p. 478)
Frage 27
Frage
A dramatic release of pent-up feelings: the idea that aggressive motivation is ‘drained’ by acting against a frustrating object (or substitute), or by a vicarious experience.
Frage 28
Frage
The notion that acting aggressively, or even just viewing aggressive material, reduces feelings of anger and aggression.
Antworten
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Cathartic hypothesis (p. 484)
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Catharsis (p. 484-486)
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Type A personality (p. 483)
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Collective aggression (p. 488)
Frage 29
Frage
A breakdown in the learnt controls (social mores) against behaving impulsively or, in this context, aggressively. For some people, alcohol has a disinhibiting effect.
Antworten
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Disinhibition (p. 488)
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Deindividuation (p. 488)
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Dehumanisation (p. 488)
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Desensitisation (p. 497)
Frage 30
Frage
Process whereby people lose their sense of socialised individual identity and engage in unsocialised, often antisocial, behaviours.
Antworten
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Deindividuation (p. 488)
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Disinhibition (p. 488)
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Dehumanisation (p. 488)
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Desensitisation (p. 497)
Frage 31
Frage
Stripping people of their dignity and humanity.
Antworten
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Dehumanisation (p. 488)
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Deindividuation (p. 488)
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Disinhibition (p. 488)
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Desensitisation (p. 497)
Frage 32
Frage
Unified aggression by a group of individuals, who may not even know one another, against another individual or group.
Frage 33
Frage
Sex-stereotypical attributes of a person.
Antworten
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Gender (p. 494)
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Cultural norms (p. 494)
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Hormones (p. 483-484)
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Personality
Frage 34
Frage
What contributes towards cultural variation of aggression?
Antworten
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Cultural norms (p. 494)
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Culture of honour (p. 495-496)
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Subculture of violence (p. 496)
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Machismo (p. 496)
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Domestic violence (p. 503)
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Crowding (p. 490-491)
Frage 35
Frage
Norms whose origin is part of the tradition of a culture.
Frage 36
Frage
A culture that endorses male violence as a way of addressing threats to social reputation or economic position.
Frage 37
Frage
A subgroup of society in which a higher level of violence is accepted as the norm.
Frage 38
Frage
A code in which challenges, abuse and even differences of opinion must be met with fists or other weapons.
Frage 39
Frage
A serious reduction in a person’s responsiveness to material that usually evokes a strong emotional reaction, such as violence or sexuality.
Antworten
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Desensitisation (p. 497)
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Disinhibition (p. 488)
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Deindividuation (p. 488)
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Dehumanisation (p. 488)
Frage 40
Frage
Anderson’s model that includes both personal and situational factors, and cognitive and affective processes in accounting for different kinds of aggression.
Antworten
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General Aggression Model (p. 492)
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Institutionalised aggression (p. 507)
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Realistic conflict theory (p. 422)
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Biosocial Theoretical Positions (p. 476)
Frage 41
Frage
Aggression that is given formal or informal recognition and social legitimacy by being incorporated into rules and norms.
Frage 42
Frage
What profressions are considered to use instutionalised aggression?
Antworten
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National defence
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Police
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Psychologists
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Sport
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Massage therapist
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Dentist
Frage 43
Frage
How do we reduce aggression in families?
Antworten
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Not rewarding acts of violence
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Rewarding non-aggressive behaviour
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Avoiding punishing behaviour
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Transference
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Catharsis
Frage 44
Frage
How do we reduce aggression at an interpersonal level?
Frage 45
Frage
How do we reduce aggression at a societal level?