Publication | Open Access
Preemptive strike: An experimental study of fear-based aggression
94
Citations
19
References
2013
Year
Social PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceFear AppealsDefensive PersonalityCrime Of AggressionPotential ThreatsSocial InfluenceIntergroup ConflictPotential ThreatSocial SciencesPsychologyIntergroup RelationPreemptive StrikeSocial ConflictAggression ManagementWorkplace ViolenceLateral ViolenceSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesSelf-defensePsychological ViolenceSocial BehaviorConflict StudyEmotionAggressionMere Presence
The mere presence of a potential threat of attack was found to be sufficient to lead a significant proportion of participants to engage in preemptive attacks toward potential threats; this response occurred even without an incentive for either party to attack the other. We developed a new experimental game—the preemptive strike game (PSG)—to demonstrate this tendency for defensive aggression. We also found that the rate at which participants attacked an individual representing a potential threat was not influenced by their minimal group membership; participants were no less likely to preemptively attack a member of their own minimal group and no more likely to use aggression against members of another minimal group. These findings indicate a need to further examine the role that fear-based defensive aggression, rather than anger-based spiteful aggression, plays in inter-individual and inter-group conflict.
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