1st Edition

Control of Aggression Implications from Basic Research

Edited By John F. Knutson Copyright 2007
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    310 Pages
    by Routledge

    Although aggressive behavior and its consequences has been a topic of concern for centuries, it is only within the recent past that serious attempts to understand aggression have been made. Within the last decade concern has expanded at a very high rate, perhaps impelled by an increase in aggression or the implication of an increase by frequent media reports of aggressive behavior. This apparent increased concern is matched by an increase in research.

    This volume brings together for the first time the diverse research strategies that reflect current major approaches to understanding the psychology of aggression. It deals with both basic laboratory research and the implications of such research for clinical work. Each chapter is designed to provide a databased analysis of aggressive behavior and an explanation of the research tactics used to obtain such data.Included in the book are a review of physiological variables in aggression; an assessment of neonatal variables in a developmental analysis of aggression; an examination of genetics and aggression; research on the Pain-Aggression hypothesis in human and non-human subjects; and an exposition of a social learning model of aggression. Theses analyses are significantly amplified by a moment-by-moment sequential analysis of the behavior of aggressive children, and by an examination of the role of semantic conditioning in the ontogeny of human aggressive repertoires. The final chapter (written by the editor) examines recurring problems in aggression research in general and considers points of consensus among the contributors to the volume.

    Control of Aggression will interest clinical psychologists and the full spectrum of other scientists engaged in research on the subject, including behavioral pharmacologists and biologists, geneticists, physiological and social psychologists, and sociologists.

    1: The Physiological Inhibition of Hostile Behavior; 2: Developmental Factors in Aggression; 3: Genetics and Mouse Aggression; 4: An Experimental Analysis of Nonhuman and Human Aggression; 5: Words and Symbols as Stimuli to Aggressive Responses; 6: Stimulus Control for Classes of Noxious Behaviors; 7: Social Learning Theory of Aggression; 8: Aggression as Manipulatable Behavior

    Biography

    Stanton Wheeler