Decentration as a means for reducing aggression after exposure to violent stimuli |
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Authors: | Jacques-Philippe Leyens,Teresa Cisneros,Jean-Fran ois Hossay |
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Affiliation: | Jacques-Philippe Leyens,Teresa Cisneros,Jean-François Hossay |
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Abstract: | Studied the effects of decentration as a self-control process to reduce the aggression subsequent to exposure to filmed violence. 48 Belgian French-speaking military recruits were run in four groups of subjects. Two saw either aggressive or neutral slides without special instructions. The other two groups saw only aggressive slides but one underwent the decentration training while the fourth one performed a subsidiary task instead. The famous ‘weapons effect’ is replicated for those subjects who did not receive the special instructions (<.025 one-tailed test) and decentration significantly reduces aggression (<.05 one-tailed test). The absence of a change in the meaning of the slides is interpreted in terms of reappraisal of the stimuli. Besides practical questions, theoretical implications are raised concerning the social context of viewing filmed violence. |
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