Aggression during competition: effects of age, sex, and amount and type of provocation.

Genetic psychology monographs Pub Date : 1979-05-01
K L Hoving, J R Wallace, G L LaForme
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Abstract

Three experiments were designed to examine the expression of instrumental and hostile aggression by 6- to 10-year-old children during a competitive game. The rate at which a child pressed a button which allegedly interfered with his opponent's progress on the task was the measure of instrumental aggression. Pressing a second button presumably caused one's opponent to hear an aversive noise and served as the measure of hostile aggression. The task was designed in an attempt to isolate (a) frustration from attack as the instigator of aggression and (b) instrumental from hostile aggression as the desired outcome. In all three experiments the measures of instrumental and hostile aggression were generally highly correlated except under provocation conditions during which the number of attacks exceeded the number of frustrations. This suggested that the task was successful in tapping two different classes of aggressive responding. In Experiment 1 older children (N = 161 males and females) expressed more of both instrumental and hostile aggression than did younger children, and males were more aggressive than females on both measures. However, neither measure of aggression varied as a function of level of provocation. This finding was discrepant from the authors' previous research which had focused solely on instrumental aggression. Apparently, the introduction of attack and the opportunity for hostile responding changed the experimental situation. In order to focus more directly on this issue, Experiments 2 (N = 60 males) and 3 (N = 56 males) used various combinations of attack and frustration with 9- and 10-year-old males. Attack, prior to frustration, elicited the greatest amount of hostile aggression. Frustration, with no attack, resulted in the highest level of instrumental aggression. The complex relationship between these sources of provocation and instrumental and hostile aggression was discussed.

比赛中的攻击性:年龄、性别、挑衅的数量和类型的影响。
本文设计了三个实验来考察6 ~ 10岁儿童在竞技游戏中工具性攻击和敌意攻击的表达。一个孩子按下一个按钮的频率据称会干扰他的对手完成任务的进度,这是工具性攻击的衡量标准。按下第二个按钮可能会让对手听到一种厌恶的声音,并作为敌对侵略的衡量标准。这项任务的设计目的是试图将(a)作为攻击的诱因的攻击带来的挫折和(b)作为期望结果的敌对攻击带来的工具性影响分离开来。在所有三个实验中,工具性攻击和敌意攻击的测量通常是高度相关的,除了在挑衅条件下,攻击次数超过挫折次数。这表明该任务成功地激发了两种不同类型的攻击性反应。在实验1中,年龄较大的儿童(N = 161名男性和女性)比年龄较小的儿童表现出更多的工具性攻击和敌意攻击,在这两项测量中,男性都比女性更具攻击性。然而,这两种侵略性的测量都不会随着挑衅程度的变化而变化。这一发现与作者之前只关注工具性攻击的研究不同。显然,攻击的引入和敌对反应的机会改变了实验情况。为了更直接地关注这个问题,实验2 (N = 60名男性)和3 (N = 56名男性)在9岁和10岁的男性中使用了攻击和挫折的各种组合。在挫折之前,攻击会引起最大程度的敌意攻击。挫折,没有攻击,导致工具性攻击的最高水平。讨论了这些挑衅来源与工具性和敌意侵略之间的复杂关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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