Individual and Developmental Differences in Aggression Flashcards
What parts of Biological psychology account for individual differences in aggression?
1) Freud
2) Brian damage
Define the ‘id’.
A part of our personality that works on the pleasure principle and is driven by biological needs.
Define the ‘ego’.
A part of our personality that aims the gratify the demands of the id by working on the reality principle and aims to protect us from harm through defence mechanisms.
Define the ‘superego’.
A part of our personality that is an internalised representation of the values and morals of society by working on the morality principle.
How does Freud’s theory of a weak superego account for individual differences for aggression?
A weak superego internalised from an absent father/deviant father/father if a girl means that it will be less able to suppress urges of the id.
How does Freud’s theory of a harsh superego account for individual differences for aggression?
A harsh superego from strict parents may cause frustration when the id is not gratified.
How does Freud’s theory account for individual differences for phobias?
Events that have caused trauma or fear get suppressed into the unconscious and cause phobias that will be unique to the individual.
Evaluate 2 strengths of the Psychodynamic approach.
1) High validity with Freud’s case studies that gathered qualitative data on dream interpretation and hypnosis
2) High applications of his approach with developing therapies of mental disorders such as hypnosis that moved away from barbaric treatments of electrotherapy
Evaluate 3 weaknesses of the Psychodynamic approach.
1) Low generalisability due to Freud’s case studies being largely women from Vienna meaning his research lacks representation of males and other countries
2) Low reliability due to his concepts such as the id being immeasurable and therefore unscientific
3) Low validity due to using case studies that gathered qualitative data from dream analysis and hypnotherapy that are open to subjectivity
How does brain damage explain individual differences in behaviour?
The ways in which the damage occurred are unique to the individual, as well as the response to damage of certain areas being different compared to other people with damage in the same place.
Give supporting research for brain damage explaining individual differences.
Hillis and Tippett (2014) argued that two individuals with similar appearing strokes may show very different outcomes a year later.
Give two examples of unique cases of brain damage causing differences in behaviour.
- Alpers (tumor in hypothalamus caused a well-mannered lawyer to become ill-mannered)
- Phineas Gage (damage to frontal lobe from a metal rod caused him to become aggressive)
Evaluate 2 strengths of brain damage explaining individual differences in behaviour.
1) High reliability in methods such as PET scans to view activity in areas of the brain are scientific and easy to objectively compare
2) Case studies into brain damaged patients are more ethical due to being a naturally occurring variable that the researchers can take advantage of
Evaluate 3 weaknesses of brain damage explaining individual differences in behaviour.
1) Low generalisability due to the circumstance in which damage occurred and response to this being unique to the individual
2) Low reliability due to it being unethical to replicate the circumstances of how the brain damage occurred therefore cannot test for consistency
3) Low validity due to not being able to establish cause and effect between damage causing change in behaviour as unsure how the person was before
What parts of Biological psychology account for developmental differences in aggression?
1) Evolution
2) Hormones
3) Freud