2016
DOI: 10.17140/sbrpoj-1-101
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The Anger-Aggression Bidirectional-Causation (AABC) Model’s Relevance for Dyadic Violence, Revenge and Catharsis

Abstract: CitationKonečni VJ. The anger-aggression bidirectional-causation (AABC) model's relevance for dyadic violence, revenge and catharsis. Review I. ABSTRACTIn this article, the multifaceted theoretical underpinnings of V. J. Konečni's AngerAggression Bidirectional-Causation (AABC) model of interpersonal aggression are described, along with a large body of supporting data, mostly from laboratory experiments. The AABC model's utility in the clarification of several complex issues of long standing in various schola… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…According to the social cognitive model of aggressive behavior, whether it is catharsis writing or hitting sandbags and other venting activities, it constitutes ruminative attention to anger events, which will amplify the anger experience and behavioral tendency of reactive attacks. The reason is that the thoughts, emotions, and behaviors related to the aggression are a combined network in memory, and the activation of hostile thinking can cause a combination of aggressive thoughts, emotions, and behavioral impulses, which are reinforced repeatedly until finally fixed in the aggressive pattern (Huesmann, 1988;Nolen-Hoeksema et al, 2008;Rusting & Nolen-Hoeksema, 1998). In addition, the results of aggressive behavior and subjective anger were inconsistent in this study, which is manifested in the results that relative to the goal catharsis and control conditions, general catharsis writing significantly increases the individual's level of aggressive behavior but not subjective anger.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the social cognitive model of aggressive behavior, whether it is catharsis writing or hitting sandbags and other venting activities, it constitutes ruminative attention to anger events, which will amplify the anger experience and behavioral tendency of reactive attacks. The reason is that the thoughts, emotions, and behaviors related to the aggression are a combined network in memory, and the activation of hostile thinking can cause a combination of aggressive thoughts, emotions, and behavioral impulses, which are reinforced repeatedly until finally fixed in the aggressive pattern (Huesmann, 1988;Nolen-Hoeksema et al, 2008;Rusting & Nolen-Hoeksema, 1998). In addition, the results of aggressive behavior and subjective anger were inconsistent in this study, which is manifested in the results that relative to the goal catharsis and control conditions, general catharsis writing significantly increases the individual's level of aggressive behavior but not subjective anger.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Luria’s proposal rests on the assumption that releasing negative emotions on social robots will relieve the user of that emotion. Catharsis literature, however, challenges this assumption: research suggests that catharsis of aggression does not reduce subsequent aggression, but can in fact increase it, providing evidence for practice effects ( Denzler and Förster, 2012 ; Konečni, 2016 ). Catharsis researchers posit that the catharsis of negative behavior and feelings requires subsequent training, learning, and self-development post-catharsis to lead to a reduction of the behavior.…”
Section: Part 2: Mechanisms and Types Of Carry-over Effects: Schemas ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, people have speculated that artificial intelligence can also have consciousness (e.g., O'Regan, 2012;Yampolskiy, 2018;Chalmers, 2023). Whether that is possible, and how, is still debated (e.g., Koch, 2019). However, it is undeniable that children and adults attribute consciousness to AI through Theory of Mind attributions (Kahn et al, 2012;Broadbent et al, 2013;Eyssel and Pfundmair, 2015;Martini et al, 2016;Tanibe et al, 2017;Świderska and Küster, 2018;Heyselaar and Bosse, 2020;Taylor et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%