Abstract :
The current study examined the role of attributional processes on triggered displaced
aggression and specified the conditions wherein affect versus attributions
would predict the degree of aggressive responding. Consistent with expectations,
attributions for a minor provoking event predicted the degree of aggression towards
targets that had violated expectations or where a specific attribution was
provided. When no such expectancy violation occurred, only negative affect generated
by the provocation predicted aggression. Furthermore, results indicated
that initial feelings toward a provoking target impacted aggressive responding by
influencing attributions made for a target’s provoking action. When faced with a
minor provocation, individuals were more likely to spontaneously attribute that
event to external causes for people they like (e.g., positive valence targets), thus
reducing the subsequent degree of aggressive retaliation. In contrast, for disliked
targets, individuals were more likely to attribute provoking behavior to internal
causes, resulting in an increase in aggression. The new model provides a theoretical
extension to the cognitive-neoassociationistic perspective on aggression (L.
Berkowitz, 1989, 1990, 1993).
Keywords :
Aggression , Attributions , Affect , Consistency , cognitive-neoassociationistic model