Social tension in the aftermath of public conflicts: an ethological analysis in humans

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Virginia Pallante , Ivan Norscia , Marie Rosenkrantz Lindegaard
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Abstract

In social mammals, conflicts are stressful events for the individuals involved. In the postconflict context, it is possible to detect the emotional state of the former opponents through the expression of displacement activities and aggressive behaviours, which indicate an increase in social tension. In humans, stressful events also induce a physiological response that leads to increased social tension behaviours. However, the variation of such behaviours in the postconflict context has never been investigated. Therefore, by conducting a video analysis of street fights recorded by closed-circuit television cameras, we explored the variation in behaviours associated with anxiety, aggression-related anger and other behaviours possibly related to both anxiety and anger (body postures and talking with gestures) in human opponents. We compared the expression of social tension behaviours before and after the eruption of the conflict and found that displacement activities (related to anxiety), aggressive behaviours (related to anger) and talking with gestures (possibly related to anxiety/anger) increased in the postconflict context, but body postures remained unchanged. Moreover, displacement activities and aggressive patterns showed a temporal variation, decreasing within 10 min following the conflict. Finally, the occurrence of anxiety-related behaviours was more sensitive to aggression intensity than anger-related behaviours, indicating that different social tension behaviours rely on different responses that might be separable. Our study highlights the importance of the ethological approach for evaluating postconflict social tension in humans, which shows a variation in its expression as observed in nonhuman primates. Following a similar comparative approach, we encourage further studies to explore the role of social tension in altering postconflict social dynamics.
公共冲突后的社会紧张局势:对人类的伦理学分析
在社会性哺乳动物中,冲突对参与冲突的个体来说是一种压力事件。在冲突后的环境中,可以通过流离失所活动和攻击行为的表现来检测前对手的情绪状态,这表明社会紧张度增加了。在人类中,压力事件也会引起生理反应,导致社会紧张行为的增加。然而,这种行为在冲突后环境中的变化却从未被研究过。因此,我们通过对闭路电视摄像机录制的街头斗殴视频进行分析,探讨了人类对手中与焦虑、攻击相关的愤怒以及其他可能与焦虑和愤怒相关的行为(身体姿势和说话手势)有关的行为变化。我们对冲突爆发前后的社会紧张行为表现进行了比较,发现在冲突后的环境中,位移活动(与焦虑有关)、攻击行为(与愤怒有关)和用手势说话(可能与焦虑/愤怒有关)有所增加,但身体姿势保持不变。此外,位移活动和攻击性行为模式呈现出时间上的变化,在冲突后 10 分钟内有所减少。最后,焦虑相关行为比愤怒相关行为对攻击强度更敏感,这表明不同的社会紧张行为依赖于不同的反应,而这些反应可能是可分离的。我们的研究凸显了用伦理学方法评估人类冲突后社会紧张关系的重要性,这种方法与在非人灵长类动物身上观察到的社会紧张关系表现形式不同。我们鼓励采用类似的比较方法,进一步研究社会紧张在改变冲突后社会动态中的作用。
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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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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