07. Bandura 1963 Flashcards

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1
Q

What was Bandura’s 1963 aim?

A

To compare imitative behaviours when children watched an aggressive model in the same room as them, in person, on film and using a cartoon character.

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2
Q

What was Bandura’s 1963 hypothesis?

A

The further from reality the model, the less influence they would have on the subjects.

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3
Q

What was Bandura’s 1963 independent variable.

A

The model (live, filmed or cartoon).

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4
Q

What was Bandura’s 1963 dependent variable.

A

Level of aggression the children displayed.

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5
Q

What was Bandura’s 1963 sample?

A

-48 boys and 48 girls from Stanford University nursery in the USA.
-Age range 35 to 69 months.
-Mean age 52 months.

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6
Q

Describe Bandura’s 1963 procedure.

A

-Children were divided into 3 experimental groups: real life model, human model being aggressive on film and an aggression cartoon character.
-Independent groups.
-There was also a control group.
-24 participants in each group.
-Separated into gender.
-Gender of role model was either M or F.

-A rating was given to each child by a researcher and a teacher on each child’s aggression.

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7
Q

Describe the procedure for the real life aggression group.

A

-Children were sat at one corner of the room with potato prints, stickers and coloured paper.
-The model was at the opposite corner of the room with a small table, chair, tinker toy set, mallet and Bobo doll.
-The experimenter left and the model played with the toys. After 1 minute the model carried out distinctive physical and verbal acts: hit and punched the Bobo doll, hit the Bobo doll with a mallet, ‘hit him down’ and ‘kick it’.
-The sequence of aggressive acts was repeated 3 times.

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8
Q

Describe the procedure for the human model being aggressive on film group.

A

-Children were sat at one corner of the room with potato prints, stickers and coloured paper.
-They watched a film where the model had the same toys as the real life model (small table, chair, tinker toy set, mallet and Bobo doll).
-After 1 minute of the film the model carried out distinctive physical and verbal acts: hit and punched the Bobo doll, hit the Bobo doll with a mallet, ‘hit him down’ and ‘kick him’.
-The sequence of aggressive acts was repeated 3 times.
-The children were in the room for 10 minutes, watching the film.

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9
Q

Describe the procedure for the cartoon aggression group.

A

-Children were sat at one corner of the room with potato prints, stickers and coloured paper.

They watched a film where the cartoon model was dressed up as a black cat performing acts:
-The cartoon cat was similar to cartoon cats and to make it realistic the background of the cartoon consisted of brightly coloured trees, butterflies and music.
-After 1 minute of the film the cat carried out distinctive physical and verbal acts: hit and punched the Bobo doll, hit the Bobo doll with a mallet, ‘hit him down’ and ‘kick him’.
-Sequence of aggressive acts was repeated 3 times.
-Children were in room for 10 minutes watching the film.

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10
Q

What were the results of Bandura’s 1963 study?

A

The mean total aggression scores for participants:
-Real life: 83
-Human film: 92
-Cartoon film: 99
-Control group: 54

-Children who had observed human models displayed more imitative aggression than those who had seen the cartoon model.
-Children who watched the aggressive models exhibited nearly twice the amount of aggression than children in control group.
-Boys performed more imitative aggression than the girls.

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11
Q

What did Bandura’s 1963 study conclude.

A

Exposure to aggressive human and cartoon models in film and real life increase aggressive behaviour.

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