Some personality factors in reaction to aggressive stimuli 1

A word association test which included aggressive stimuli (weapon names) was given to college students. Those whose responses were relatively high or low in emotionality were asked to participate in a “study of stress reactions to electric shock” When the subject arrived at the laboratory, he and a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of personality Vol. 39; no. 2; pp. 163 - 177
Main Authors Fraczek, Adam, Macaulay, Jacqueline R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.06.1971
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Summary:A word association test which included aggressive stimuli (weapon names) was given to college students. Those whose responses were relatively high or low in emotionality were asked to participate in a “study of stress reactions to electric shock” When the subject arrived at the laboratory, he and a partner were given tasks to perform The partner, a confederate of the experimenter, gave the subject an unfairly high number of shocks in judging the subject's performance The subject then judged the partner's work, using shock Half the subjects were in the apparently accidental presence of guns when given the chance to retaliate Among low‐emotionality subjects, the presence of guns increased the number of shocks given the partner, as Berkowitz and LePage found High‐emotionality subjects tended to give the partner longer shocks than low subjects, whether guns were present or not. In contrast to the low subjects, when guns were present, highs tended to give shocks of shorter duration and to report lowered anger, as if the aggressive stimuli had dampened the intensity of their reaction. The results as a whole indicate that the perceptual set for aggressive stimuli and the presence of such stimuli have an interactive effect on aggressive tendencies
ISSN:0022-3506
1467-6494
DOI:10.1111/j.1467-6494.1971.tb00034.x