A comparison of human aggression committed by groups and individuals: An interindividual-intergroup discontinuity |
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Authors: | Brian P Meier Verlin B Hinsz |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND 58105, USA |
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Abstract: | Experimental research comparing aggressive behavior committed by groups and individuals is important but sparse. This experiment compared aggressive behavior (i.e., amount of hot sauce allocated for others to consume) in four types of interactions: intergroup, interindividual, group-to-individual, and individual-to-group. The results revealed that intergroup interactions were significantly more aggressive than interindividual interactions. In addition, groups allocated and received significantly more hot sauce than individuals. These effects were not explained by diffusion of responsibility or trait aggressiveness. The experiment reveals two noteworthy conclusions: (1) the interindividual-intergroup discontinuity effect extends to aggressive behavior and (2) interactions in which a group is either the source or target of aggression are situational influences that can increase it. |
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Keywords: | Aggression Diffusion of responsibility Group aggression Groups Intergroup aggression Interindividal-intergroup discontinuity |
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