Automatic sources of aggression.

Author(s)
Todorov, A. & Bargh, J.A.
Year
Abstract

In this paper research on automaticity with particular relevance to aggression is reviewed. Once triggered by environmental features, preconscious automatic processes run to completion without any conscious monitoring. The basic experimental technique for studying automatic processes is priming. Studies are reviewed showing that priming, including subliminal priming, of mental constructs related to aggression leads to reliable effects on perceptions, judgments, and behavior. Specifically, after such priming, people perceive ambiguous behaviors as more aggressive and tend to act more aggressively themselves as well. Also studies are reviewed showing that: (a) prolonged exposure to violence can result in the development of chronic accessibility of aggressive constructs affecting how the social environment is interpreted, and (b) even goal-directed behavior can be automatically triggered by situational features if this behavior is consistently and fequently enacted in the same situation. (A)

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Publication

Library number
20021315 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Aggression and Violent Behavior, Vol. 7 (2002), No. 1, p. 53-68, 66 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.