click below
click below
Normal Size Small Size show me how
chapter 10
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Cyberbullying | Bullying, harassing, or threatening someone using technology, like texting, social media, or email. |
| Aggression | Words or actions meant to hurt someone, like hitting, shocking, or saying mean things. |
| Physical Aggression | Physically hurting someone’s body. |
| Social Aggression | Hurting someone’s feelings or relationships, like gossiping, excluding, or cyberbullying. |
| Hostile Aggression | Aggression caused by anger, where the goal is to hurt someone. |
| Instrumental Aggression | Aggression used as a way to achieve something else, not just to hurt. |
| Instinctive Behavior | Natural behavior that all members of a species are born with, not learned. |
| Frustration-Aggression Theory | The idea that frustration (not getting what you want) can make you more likely to act aggressively. |
| Frustration | Feeling upset because something is blocking you from reaching your goal. |
| Displacement | Taking your anger or aggression out on someone or something safer, instead of the real source of your frustration. |
| Relative Deprivation | Feeling unhappy because you think you have less than others you compare yourself to. |
| Social Learning Theory | The idea that we learn how to behave by watching others, copying them, and seeing the rewards or punishments for their actions. |
| Prosocial Behavior | Positive, kind, and helpful actions toward others (the opposite of harmful or antisocial behavior). |
| Catharsis | The idea that releasing anger or aggressive energy (like through yelling or hitting something) can reduce aggressive feelings. |