Aggressio…

Questions

                                                   Aggressiоn      1Aggressiоn cаn be defined аs physicаl оr verbal behavior intended to hurt someone.  2Scientists have learned there are various inborn and physical factors that influence the likelihood that an animal or human will be aggressive.        3Because aggression is a complex behavior, no one spot in the brain controls it. 4But in both animals and humans, researchers have found neural systems that assist aggression. 5When they activate those areas in the brain, hostility increases; when they deactivate them, hostility decreases. 6Tame animals can thus be provoked into rage, and raginganimals into submission.        7There are also genetic influences on aggression. 8It has long been known that animals of many species can be bred for aggressiveness. 9Sometimes this is done for practical purposes (the breeding of fighting cocks). 10Sometimes, breeding is done for research. 11Finnish psychologist Kirsti Lagerspetz took normal albino mice and bred the most aggressive ones together and the least aggressive ones together. 12After repeating the procedure for twenty-six generations, she had one set of fierce mice and one set of placid mice. 13Aggressiveness similarly varies among primates and humans. 14Our temperament—how intense and reactive we are—is partly something we bring with us into the world, influenced by our sympathetic nervous system’s reactivity. 15Identical twins, when asked separately, are more likely than fraternal twins to agree on whether they have “a violent temper.”      16Level of alcohol intake also influences neural sensitivity to aggressive stimulation. 17Both laboratory experiments and police data indicate that when people are provoked, alcohol unleashes aggression. 18Violent people are more likely (1) to drink and (2) to become aggressive when intoxicated. 19In experiments, intoxicated people administer strong shocks or higher pain buttons. 20In the real world, people who have been drinking commit about half of rapes and other violent crimes. 21In 65 percent of homicides, the murderer and/or the victim had been drinking.     22Aggressiveness also correlates with the male sex hormone, testosterone. 23Although hormonal influences appear much stronger in lower animals than in humans, drugs that diminish testosterone levels in violent human males will subdue their aggressive tendencies.    ____ is the number of the sentence that states the central point

                                                   Aggressiоn      1Aggressiоn cаn be defined аs physicаl оr verbal behavior intended to hurt someone.  2Scientists have learned there are various inborn and physical factors that influence the likelihood that an animal or human will be aggressive.        3Because aggression is a complex behavior, no one spot in the brain controls it. 4But in both animals and humans, researchers have found neural systems that assist aggression. 5When they activate those areas in the brain, hostility increases; when they deactivate them, hostility decreases. 6Tame animals can thus be provoked into rage, and raginganimals into submission.        7There are also genetic influences on aggression. 8It has long been known that animals of many species can be bred for aggressiveness. 9Sometimes this is done for practical purposes (the breeding of fighting cocks). 10Sometimes, breeding is done for research. 11Finnish psychologist Kirsti Lagerspetz took normal albino mice and bred the most aggressive ones together and the least aggressive ones together. 12After repeating the procedure for twenty-six generations, she had one set of fierce mice and one set of placid mice. 13Aggressiveness similarly varies among primates and humans. 14Our temperament—how intense and reactive we are—is partly something we bring with us into the world, influenced by our sympathetic nervous system’s reactivity. 15Identical twins, when asked separately, are more likely than fraternal twins to agree on whether they have “a violent temper.”      16Level of alcohol intake also influences neural sensitivity to aggressive stimulation. 17Both laboratory experiments and police data indicate that when people are provoked, alcohol unleashes aggression. 18Violent people are more likely (1) to drink and (2) to become aggressive when intoxicated. 19In experiments, intoxicated people administer strong shocks or higher pain buttons. 20In the real world, people who have been drinking commit about half of rapes and other violent crimes. 21In 65 percent of homicides, the murderer and/or the victim had been drinking.     22Aggressiveness also correlates with the male sex hormone, testosterone. 23Although hormonal influences appear much stronger in lower animals than in humans, drugs that diminish testosterone levels in violent human males will subdue their aggressive tendencies.    ____ is the number of the sentence that states the central point

                                                   Aggressiоn      1Aggressiоn cаn be defined аs physicаl оr verbal behavior intended to hurt someone.  2Scientists have learned there are various inborn and physical factors that influence the likelihood that an animal or human will be aggressive.        3Because aggression is a complex behavior, no one spot in the brain controls it. 4But in both animals and humans, researchers have found neural systems that assist aggression. 5When they activate those areas in the brain, hostility increases; when they deactivate them, hostility decreases. 6Tame animals can thus be provoked into rage, and raginganimals into submission.        7There are also genetic influences on aggression. 8It has long been known that animals of many species can be bred for aggressiveness. 9Sometimes this is done for practical purposes (the breeding of fighting cocks). 10Sometimes, breeding is done for research. 11Finnish psychologist Kirsti Lagerspetz took normal albino mice and bred the most aggressive ones together and the least aggressive ones together. 12After repeating the procedure for twenty-six generations, she had one set of fierce mice and one set of placid mice. 13Aggressiveness similarly varies among primates and humans. 14Our temperament—how intense and reactive we are—is partly something we bring with us into the world, influenced by our sympathetic nervous system’s reactivity. 15Identical twins, when asked separately, are more likely than fraternal twins to agree on whether they have “a violent temper.”      16Level of alcohol intake also influences neural sensitivity to aggressive stimulation. 17Both laboratory experiments and police data indicate that when people are provoked, alcohol unleashes aggression. 18Violent people are more likely (1) to drink and (2) to become aggressive when intoxicated. 19In experiments, intoxicated people administer strong shocks or higher pain buttons. 20In the real world, people who have been drinking commit about half of rapes and other violent crimes. 21In 65 percent of homicides, the murderer and/or the victim had been drinking.     22Aggressiveness also correlates with the male sex hormone, testosterone. 23Although hormonal influences appear much stronger in lower animals than in humans, drugs that diminish testosterone levels in violent human males will subdue their aggressive tendencies.    ____ is the number of the sentence that states the central point

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