Chapter 10 Aggression and Antisocial Behavior Aggressive instincts can

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Chapter 10
Aggression and Antisocial
Behavior
Aggressive instincts can
be modified so that even
cats and rats can live
together peacefully.
© 2014 Wadsworth Cengage Learning
Chapter Topics
 Defining Aggression and Antisocial Behavior
 Why do People Behave Aggressively?
 Inner Causes of Aggression
 Interpersonal Causes of Aggression
 External Causes of Aggression
 Self and Culture
 Other Antisocial Behavior
Debate: Rwanda and Its Fallout
 Consider the case of the Rwandan genocide in the 1990s
 Who was to blame for the genocide? Why?
 Are people essentially violent or peace-seeking?
 Offer examples from Rwanda to support your position
Defining Aggression and Antisocial
Behavior
 How do social psychologists define aggression differently
than most lay people?
 Aggression – any behavior intended to harm another
person who does not want to be harmed.
 Antisocial behavior – behavior that damages
interpersonal relationships or is culturally undesirable.
 What is displaced aggression?
 What’s the difference between direct and indirect forms of
aggression?
 What’s the difference between proactive and reactive
aggression?
 How do psychologists define violence?
 Violence – aggression that has its goal extreme physical
harm, such as injury or death.
Is the World More or Less Violent Now
Than in the Past?
 If modern weapons kill more people than ancient ones, how
are we less violent now than in the past?
Overall time the planet is actually becoming more peaceful
place to live.
 How have human beliefs (e.g., the Age of Reason, antislavery, etc.) changed the incidence of violence in the world?
 How has culture suppressed violence over time?
Is Aggression Innate or Learned?
 How have different forms of government tried to “solve”
aggression?
 Why have they not succeeded in getting rid of aggression?
Instinct Theories of Aggression
 How can aggression be seen as an evolutionary trait?
What purpose would it serve in propagating the species?
 Freud proposed that human motivational forces are
based on instinct
 Sex – life giving instinct – Eros
 Aggression – death instinct – Thanatos
Learning Theories of Aggression
 How can aggression be seen as a learned trait? How
does modeling increase aggression?
 How does Bandura’s Bobo doll study show the power of
modeling aggression?
Nature and Nurture
 How can cultural socialization and learning increase or
decrease innate aggressive impulses and aggressive
behaviors?
 How does football illustrate learned behaviors with regards
to aggression?
 How are both learning and instinct relevant?
 Do we learn aggression? Are we innately peaceful?
Inner Causes of Aggression
 What is frustration-aggression hypothesis?
 How can this hypothesis explain aggression?
 Consider a time when you acted aggressively
 Was frustration a factor?
 What was the precipitating event?
Inner Causes of Aggression (cont’d.)
 What affect do negative moods have on aggression?
 Why do unpleasant moods increase aggression?
 Why do angry people become aggressive?
 What circumstances would discourage them from
becoming aggressive?
 How can excitation transfer increase aggression?
Hostile Cognitive Biases
 Hostile attribution bias: perceive ambiguous actions by others
as aggressive
 Hostile perception bias: perceive social interactions as being
aggressive
 Hostile expectation bias: assume people will react to potential
conflicts with aggression
Hostile Cognitive Biases (cont’d.)
 Aggressive people have inner biases that make them
 Expect others to react aggressively
 View ambiguous acts as aggressive
 Assume others act purposefully when they hurt or offend
them
Age and Aggression
 How are toddlers more aggressive than any other age?
 Why aren’t they perpetrators of violent crimes, if they are so
aggressive?
 Which age group is most violent?
Gender and Aggression
 How do men and women deal with stress differently?
 Examples: fight or flight syndrome; tend and befriend
syndrome
 What is relational aggression? Which gender is more likely
to engage in relational aggression?
 How is bullying different from other forms of aggression?
Selfishness and Influence
 How can aggression be a means to resolve social
disputes?
 How can aggression be a form of social influence?
 When do people resort to aggression to get what they
want?
The Social Side of Sex: Sexual
Aggression
 People use aggression and force to get sex from others
 Sexual coercion is often defined broadly
 Consequences for victim are dependent on definition of rape
 Profile of sexually coercive men differs from traditional
stereotypes
Domestic and Relationship Violence
 What is domestic violence?
 Surgeon General declared domestic violence the
number one health risk in U.S.
 Who is most at risk for domestic violence?
 What factors contribute to domestic violence?
External Causes of Aggression
 What is the weapons effect?
 How does the media influence aggression?
 What happens to aggression levels when men watch videos
of rape?
 What unpleasant environmental situations increase
aggression?
 What effect will global warming likely have on aggression?
External Causes of Aggression
(cont’d.)
 What chemicals or substances are associated with higher
aggression, and how do they operate?
 Examples: testosterone, serotonin, alcohol
 What other drugs and chemicals are linked with aggression?
 Which chemicals have causal links with aggression? Which
have significant correlations?
Food for Thought
 Is there a link between diet and violence?
 Nutrition is linked to aggression and violence
 Junk food can increase violence
 Vitamin supplements reduces antisocial behavior
 How could legislators use this information to reduce violence
in the United States?
Self and Culture
 What does the Malay tradition of running amok reveal about
the influence of culture on aggression?
 How does poor self-control and wounded pride affect
aggression?
 Why is narcissism related to aggression?
 What role does provocation play in aggression?
Culture of Honor
 What is a “culture of honor?”
 How does the culture of honor in the southern United
States influence levels of violence?
 How is risk-taking linked to ideas of honor?
 What causes the increased violence in cultures of honor?
 What role do culture of honor values play in terrorism?
Other Antisocial Behavior
 Lying
 In what situations do most people lie?
 How can you detect liars?
 Taboo words
 Who uses taboo words?
 Why do people use taboo words?
Other Antisocial Behavior (cont’d.)
 Cheating
 Who cheats?
 What are some ways to reduce cheating?
 Stealing
 Under what circumstances are people most likely to steal?
Other Antisocial Behavior (cont’d.)
 Types of norms
 Injunctive norms: specify what most approve or disapprove of
 Descriptive norms: specify what most people do
 Littering
 Which type of norm is most effective at reducing littering?
 What is Broken Windows Theory? How does it relate to littering?
What Makes Us Human?
 Human culture has created unique tools for aggression
 What tools have humans created for aggression?
 What categories of aggression are unique to humans?
 Human culture attempts to restrain aggression
 Which cultural restraints on aggression work best?
Discussion: Antisocial Behavior
 What types of antisocial behaviors are most prevalent?
Which ones are most harmful? Why?
 Think about a time when you engaged in an antisocial
behavior (lying, stealing, cheating, violence, etc.). What
do you believe was the cause of that behavior?
Conclusion
 Humans engage in antisocial behaviors, including
aggression
 Aggression has many causes and influences
 Antisocial behaviors, including aggression, are often a
result of several personal and environmental factors
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