PSYC 2120 Chapter Notes - Chapter 12: Twin Study, Intensify, Social Isolation
Document Summary
Defining aggression: aggression: any physical or verbal behaviour that is intended to harm another person. Intention must be to do harm: ex. lifeguard applies painful pressure to someone"s chest isn"t aggression because they"re intention is to save a life. Measuring aggression: we research what causes aggression by having participants in labs participate in tasks in which they believe they are causing physical harm to someone without actually doing so. Biology and human aggression: eros: freud"s term for what he proposed is the human inborn instinct to seek pleasure and to create, thanatos: freud"s term for what he proposed is the human inborn instinct to aggress and destroy. An ethological perspective: aggression is rooted in our innate need for survival and reproduction, when our material resources are under threat, when our offspring is attacked, when our social status is threatened. The physiology of aggression: physiology of aggression reflected in, brain regions, body chemistry.