Killing begets killing: evidence from a bug-killing paradigm that initial killing fuels subsequent killing |
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Authors: | Martens Andy Kosloff Spee Greenberg Jeff Landau Mark J Schmader Toni |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Canterbury, New Zealand. andy.martens@canterbury.ac.nz |
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Abstract: | Killing appears to perpetuate itself even in the absence of retaliation. This phenomenon may occur in part as a means to justify prior killing and so ease the threat of prior killing. In addition, this effect should arise particularly when a killer perceives similarity to the victims because similarity should exacerbate threat from killing. To examine these ideas, the authors developed a bug-killing paradigm in which they manipulated the degree of initial bug killing in a "practice task" to observe the effects on subsequent self-paced killing during a timed "extermination task." In Studies 1 and 2, for participants reporting some similarity to bugs, inducing greater initial killing led to more subsequent self-paced killing. In Study 3, after greater initial killing, more subsequent self-paced killing led to more favorable affective change. Implications for understanding lethal human violence are discussed. |
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