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Aggression: The Role of Nature

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Study Guide for Exam 4 is now available. Is it aggression? Exercise ... Opposite of life instinct (Eros). Lorenz: Aggression innate, but adaptive. Ethologist. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aggression: The Role of Nature


1
Aggression The Role of Nature
  • Soundtrack
  • Bohemian Rhapsody (Queen)
  • Mack the Knife (Bobby Darin)
  • To what extent is aggression caused by
  • internal (innate, genetic, or biological)
  • Factors
  • For students who participated in the
  • survey earlier in the semester 2nd part to be
  • handed out on Tues.
  • Study Guide for Exam 4 is now available

2
Is it aggression?
  • Exercise

3
What is aggression?
  • Aggression Intentional behavior aimed at
    causing either physical or psychological pain.
  • Key feature Intention
  • Not the same as assertive or ambitious
  • Examples
  • Beer bottle at party
  • Drunk driver

4
Why might people behave aggressively?
  • Is aggression inborn?
  • Instinct theorists
  • Freud Aggression innate, destructive
  • Freud Death instinct (Thanatos) innate impulse
    for self-destruction. Opposite of life instinct
    (Eros).
  • Lorenz Aggression innate, but adaptive.
  • Ethologist. Emphasized that aggressive instinct
    facilitates the individuals survival,
    reproduction.

5
Instinct theories
  • Instinct theories are NOT widely accepted.
  • Problems with assuming that aggression is innate

6
Problems w/Instinct Theories
  • Humans vary greatly in aggressiveness.
  • Cross-cultural differences (groups in South Seas
    vs. Yanomamo in South American Iroquois and
    social change)

7
Problems w/Instinct Theories
  • Regional differences in aggressive behavior
  • Culture of honor Homicide rates for males are
    significantly higher than those for white
    northern males, especially in rural areas. But
    this is true only for "argument-related"
    homicides.

8
Culture of honor experiments (Dov Cohen, Richard
Nisbett colleagues)
  • IV A confederate accidentally bumped into the
    participant, and called the P an insulting name
    (or no incident in the control condition).
  • DVs Ps guess about evaluators ratings of his
    masculinity his physiological response to
    stress and his behavior
  • Results Southerners in insult condition were
    than northerners to think they would be seen as
    less masculine, experienced increased cortisol
    and testosterone, and were slower to move out of
    the confederates way in a very narrow
    passageway.

9
Problems w/Instinct Theories
  • If aggression is a human instinct, then it is
    hard to account for this variability both within
    and between cultures.

10
Problems w/Instinct Theories
  • Circular reasoning
  • Why do sheep herd? Because they have a herding
    instinct.
  • Doesnt explain the phenomenon, just names it.

11
Biological influences on aggression
  • Neural influences
  • AMYGDALA -- associated with aggressive behavior
    in humans and in lower animals.
  • When electrically stimulated, docile animals
    become violent when neural activity in the
    amygdala is blocked violent animals become
    docile.

12
Neural influences Interaction w/environment
  • Social factors can influence the impact of these
    neural mechanisms.
  • If a male monkey is in the presence of other,
    less dominant monkeys, he will attack the other
    monkeys when the amydala is stimulated.
  • But if the amygdala is stimulated while the
    monkey is in the presence of more dominant
    monkeys, he will not attack but will run away
    instead.

13
Chemical/hormonal influences
  • Testosterone
  • Injection of testosterone will increase
    aggression in animals (cause and effect
    relationship in non-human animals)

14
Testosterone in humans
  • Dabbs and colleagues
  • Naturally occurring testosterone levels are
    higher among prisoners convicted of violent
    crimes than those convicted of nonviolent crimes.
  • Once incarcerated, prisoners with higher
    testosterone levels violated more prison rules
  • Compared fraternities within a given college
    those known to be more rambunctious, less
    socially responsible, and more crude had the
    highest average testosterone levels.
  • Correlational Questions about direction of
    causality and third variables

15
  • Behaving aggressively also can increase
    testosterone
  • 3rd variables Violent prisoners may differ in
    many ways from less nonviolent prisoners (e.g.,
    in stress, family history, etc.)
  • However, people opting for sex reassignment show
    more aggression as testosterone is increased.
    (Still correlational and not a random sample
    expectations may influence)

16
Genetic influences
  • Are people who are more aggressive genetically
    different from those who are less aggressive?
  • Can breed animals to be more or less aggressive

17
Genetic influences
  • Twin studies
  • Identical (monozygotic) twins have identical
    genetic makeup.
  • Fraternal (Dizygotic) twins are no more similar
    genetically than any other siblings.
  • Twin studies are based on the assumption that
    identical twins should show greater similarity on
    any trait that is presumed to be inherited than
    fraternal twins.

18
Genetic influences
  • Identical twins twice as likely as fraternal
    twins to be similar in degree of criminal
    activity.
  • Christiansen 7000 twins born in Denmark
    1881-1910
  • 35 identical vs. 13 fraternal showed similarity
    in serious criminal activity
  • Problems
  • 65 identical twins did not have similar records
  • Identical twins may have more similar
    environments than do fraternal twins.

19
Genetic/biological vs. environment
  • Debate
  • Aggressive behavior results from an interaction
    between genetic/biological factors and
    environmental factors, but aggression is more
    powerfully influenced by genetic and/or
    biological factors.
  • Aggressive behavior results from an interaction
    between genetic/biological factors and
    environmental factors, but aggression is more
    powerfully influenced by environmental factors.

20
Heredity vs. environment
  • Example Serial killer, Joel Rifkin
  • Researchers examine both environment and possible
    genetic basis (look at brain scans)
  • Video clip discussion
  • To what extent do you think that Joel Rifkins
    killing was caused by genetic/biological factors
    or environmental factors?
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