Experiements
Media Violence
Theories
Situational Influences
Reducing Aggression
100

This famous experiment by Albert Bandura showed children imitating aggressive behavior towards an inflatable doll.

What is the Bobo Doll Experiment?

100
This film portrays relational aggression through gossip, exclusion, and manipulation among high school girls. 

What is Mean Girls?

100

This theory suggests that people can become less aggressive after expressing anger. 

What is the Catharsis Hypothesis?

100

This environmental factor is associated with increased aggression during the Spring/Summer.

What is heat?

100

This technique encourages slowing one's breathing and focusing on the present moment to reduce emotional reactivity. 

What is mindfulness?

200

This real-world case influenced ethical stanards in psychology after participants experienced extreme stress and aggression in a simulated environment.

What is the Stanford Prison Experiment?

200

This Taylor Swift song centers on betrayal and revenge between former friends.

What is Bad Blood?
200

This theory suggests that aggression often results from the blocking of goal-oriented action. 

What is the frustration-aggression hypothesis?

200

This substance impairs judgment and lowers inhibition, increasing aggressive responses.

What is alcohol?

200

This technique involves removing a desired stimulus to decrease aggressive behaviors. 

What is negative punishment?

300

In this study, participants administered what they believed were harmful electric shocks under authority pressure.

What is the Milgrim Experiment?

300

This game franchise allows players to engage in crime sprees, often involving violence and police chases.

What is Grand Theft Auto?

300

This theory/concept suggests that the mere presence of aggression-related cues (i.e. knife or gun) can increase aggressive thoughts, feelings, and responses.

What is the weapons effect?

300

Criticism, we consider unfair, sarcastic remarks, or physical assaults are all examples of this.

What is provocation? 

300

Teaching clients to interpret ambiguous social cues in a non-hostile way targets this cognitive bias often linked to aggressive responses.

What is the hostile attribution bias? 

400

This summer camp study demonstrated how competition over limited resources can lead to intergroup hostility.

What is the Robbers Cave Experiment?

400

This horror franchise centers on a night where all crime, including murder, is legal- illustrating unrestrained aggression.

What is The Purge?

400

This theory posits that intergroup aggression results from competition between groups for limited, valuable resources.

What is Realistic Conflict Theory?

400
This hormone is assumed to play a role in aggression.

What is testosterone?

400

Developed by Arnold P. Goldstein, this intervention program combines social skills, anger control, and moral reasoning to reduce aggressive behavior. 

What is Aggression Replacement Training (ART)?

500

In this variation of the Milgrim study, partcipants showed the most aggression/obedience.

What is when authority figures were present (authority pressure)?

500

This type of aggression is goal-directed and calculated, often seen in strategic characters like Walter White.

What is instrumental aggression?

500

This is the oldest and most famous explanation for human aggression.

What are biological factors?

500

This describes a vicious cycle where family members, typically parents and children, inadvertently reinforce each other's negative and aggressive behaviors. 

What is the Coercive Family Interaction Model?

500

Research on affective self-regulation suggests that interventions such as slow breathing or mindfulness reduce aggression by decreasing activity in this brain region associated with emotional reactivity.

What is the amygdala?

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