Perception of an Aggressor and His Victim as a Function of Their Relationship and Retaliation
- 1 April 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Psychological Reports
- Vol. 44 (2) , 609-610
- https://doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1979.44.2.609
Abstract
Two experiments, using a simple incident of aggression described in a passage, were conducted to study the evaluation of an aggressor (Study II) and his victim (Study I) as a function of their relationship. Both studies used a 2 (subjects' sex) × 2 (aggressor superior to victim vs aggressor subordinate to victim) × 2 (retaliating vs nonretaliating victim) factorial design, with 20 college students per cell as subjects ( N = 320). The nonretaliating victim was rated more positively than the retaliating victim on all dimensions. The aggressor tended to be more favorably judged when the victim was a superior rather than a subordinate, although this was not true of all conditions or of all dimensions.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- The Nobility of Nonviolence: Person Perception as a Function of Retaliation to AggressionThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1977