PastPaper.workedSolution
### Indicative Essay Structure
**Introduction**
- Define aggression and introduce the debate between biological explanations (nature) and learning theory explanations (nurture).
- Outline that biological psychology focuses on internal mechanisms (brain structure and hormones), while learning theories focus on external environmental contingencies (social learning and reinforcement).
**Biological Explanations: Brain Structure & Hormones (AO1)**
- **Brain Structure:** The limbic system, particularly the amygdala, plays a key role in processing emotional responses such as fear and aggression. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) acts as an executive control center; deficits or low activity in the PFC lead to a loss of control over impulsive aggressive urges.
- **Hormones:** High levels of testosterone are linked to dominant, competitive, and aggressive behaviors. Conversely, low levels of cortisol are associated with a lack of fear and autonomic under-arousal, which can lead to sensation-seeking and aggressive behavior.
**Biological Explanations: Evaluation (AO3)**
- **Supporting Evidence:** Raine et al. (1997) used PET scans on murderers pleading Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) and found reduced activity in the prefrontal cortex and abnormal activity in the amygdala, providing objective empirical support for the brain abnormality explanation.
- **Limitations:** Much of the research on hormones and brain structures (e.g., lesion studies) is correlational, meaning we cannot definitively establish cause and effect (e.g., does high testosterone cause aggression, or does aggressive behaviour increase testosterone?).
- **Reductionism:** Biological explanations can be criticized for being biologically reductionist, simplifying complex, socially determined behaviors to purely chemical or anatomical processes while ignoring environmental and situational factors.
**Learning Theory Explanations: SLT & Operant Conditioning (AO1)**
- **Social Learning Theory (SLT):** Proposes that aggression is acquired through observation and imitation of aggressive role models. This cognitive-mediational process involves four steps: attention (noticing the behavior), retention (remembering it), reproduction (physical capability to perform it), and motivation (often driven by vicarious reinforcement, where seeing a model rewarded for aggression increases the likelihood of imitation).
- **Operant Conditioning:** Suggests aggression is learned through direct reinforcement. Positive reinforcement occurs when aggressive behavior yields a desired reward (e.g., a child gets a toy by pushing another child). Negative reinforcement occurs when aggressive behavior successfully removes an unpleasant stimulus (e.g., fighting back to stop a bully).
**Learning Theory Explanations: Evaluation (AO3)**
- **Supporting Evidence:** Bandura, Ross, and Ross (1961) demonstrated that children exposed to an aggressive adult model displaying novel physical and verbal abuse toward a Bobo doll were significantly more likely to imitate those exact behaviors compared to children in non-aggressive or control conditions.
- **Limitations:** Bandura's Bobo doll studies were conducted in artificial laboratory environments, raising issues of ecological validity and demand characteristics (the doll is designed to be hit). Additionally, the studies only measured short-term effects.
- **Biological Neglect:** Learning theories struggle to explain the consistent finding that males display higher levels of physical aggression than females across various conditions, pointing to a biological predisposition (such as higher testosterone levels) that pure behaviorism fails to account for.
**Conclusion & Synthesis**
- A purely nature or nurture explanation is insufficient. An interactionist approach (such as the diathesis-stress model) is more comprehensive, proposing that biological factors (e.g., genetic vulnerability or brain functioning) create a predisposition for aggression, but environmental stimuli (such as learning through imitation or reinforcement) trigger its expression.
PastPaper.markingScheme
### Marking Grid (16 Marks Total: 8 Marks AO1, 8 Marks AO3)
| Level | Marks | Descriptor |
| --- | --- | --- |
| **Level 4** | **13–16** | • Demonstrates precise, detailed, and comprehensive knowledge and understanding of biological and learning explanations of aggression (AO1).
• Offers a well-developed, balanced, and critical evaluation, drawing logical connections between theories and empirical research (AO3).
• Explains synoptic points (e.g., nature/nurture debate, reductionism vs. interactionism) with excellent clarity and structure. |
| **Level 3** | **9–12** | • Demonstrates mostly accurate and detailed knowledge of both biological and learning explanations of aggression (AO1).
• Evaluation is developed and balanced, using relevant research studies (e.g., Raine, Bandura) to support arguments (AO3).
• The essay is well-structured and relevant to the question, with some attempt to integrate synoptic concepts. |
| **Level 2** | **5–8** | • Demonstrates basic knowledge of biological and/or learning explanations, though there may be omissions or a lack of detail in one of the areas (AO1).
• Evaluation is present but may be unbalanced, descriptive rather than critical, or rely heavily on generic points (AO3).
• Structure is present but may lack flow and clear logical links. |
| **Level 1** | **1–4** | • Demonstrates isolated or superficial knowledge of aggression explanations with significant inaccuracies (AO1).
• Evaluation is minimal, absent, or highly subjective with little to no empirical support (AO3).
• The answer lacks structure and fails to address the prompt effectively. |
| **Level 0** | **0** | • No rewardable material. |
**Indicative Content:**
- **AO1 (8 marks):** Points on the amygdala, prefrontal cortex, testosterone, cortisol, Social Learning Theory (attention, retention, reproduction, motivation, vicarious reinforcement), and Operant Conditioning (positive/negative reinforcement).
- **AO3 (8 marks):** Use of supporting studies (Raine et al., Bandura et al.), methodological criticisms of these studies (ecological validity, generalizability), conceptual debates (reductionism vs. holism, nature vs. nurture, determinism), practical applications (pharmacological treatments vs. behavior modification therapies), and the benefits of an interactionist viewpoint.