COMMENTS

  1. Violence, Media Effects, and Criminology

    Does media violence cause aggression and/or violence?The study of media effects is informed by a variety of theoretical perspectives and spans many disciplines including communications and media studies, psychology, medicine, sociology, and criminology.

  2. Violence in the media: Psychologists study potential harmful effects

    Early research on the effects of viewing violence on television—especially among children—found a desensitizing effect and the potential for aggression. Is the same true for those who play violent video games?

  3. The Impact of Electronic Media Violence: Scientific Theory and Research

    For better or worse the mass media are having an enormous impact on our children's values, beliefs, and behaviors. Unfortunately, the consequences of one particular common element of the electronic mass media has a particularly detrimental effect on children's well being. Research evidence has accumulated over the past half-century that ...

  4. Violent Media in Childhood and Seriously Violent Behavior in

    The current study aims to fill noted research gaps. First, while extant research examines exposure to violence on television and in video games, exposures through other media, such as music, are less well studied yet constitute a large part of youth media diets. Second, much of the literature focuses on aggressive rather than violent behavior.

  5. Content Effects: Violence in the Media

    This article examines the effects of media violence on aggression, desensitization, and fear. It reviews the theories, research methods, and findings of the field.

  6. Media violence and youth aggression

    Media violence and youth aggression. The link between violent media—movies, television, and video games—and aggression among children and teenagers is both well established and widely misunderstood, experts told The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health. Many people misunderstand the research, believes Victor Strasburger (University of New ...

  7. Violent media and real-world behavior: Historical data and recent

    How does violent media affect real-world behavior? This article reviews historical data and recent trends to explore the complex relationship between media and society.

  8. Desensitization to Media Violence: Links With Habitual Media Violence

    This study examined the links between desensitization to violent media stimuli and habitual media violence exposure as a predictor and aggressive cognitions and behavior as outcome variables. Two weeks after completing measures of habitual media violence ...

  9. Violent media use and aggression: Two longitudinal network studies

    Exposure to violent media has been widely linked to increased aggression. In the present research, we examined whether violent media exposure would be associated with increased aggression, which wo...

  10. Understanding Causality in the Effects of Media Violence

    This article places media violence research into a broader context than the typical public debate about whether violent video games (or TV programs, or movies) ...

  11. The Role of Media Violence in Violent Behavior

    Abstract Media violence poses a threat to public health inasmuch as it leads to an increase in real-world violence and aggression. Research shows that fictional television and film violence contribute to both a short-term and a long-term increase in aggression and violence in young viewers. Television news violence also contributes to increased violence, principally in the form of imitative ...

  12. The role of media violence in violent behavior

    Media violence poses a threat to public health inasmuch as it leads to an increase in real-world violence and aggression. Research shows that fictional television and film violence contribute to both a short-term and a long-term increase in aggression and violence in young viewers. Television news v …

  13. Effects of violence in mass media

    Effects of violence in mass media. The study of violence in mass media analyzes the degree of correlation between themes of violence in media sources (particularly violence in video games, television and films) with real-world aggression and violence over time. Many social scientists support the correlation, [ 1][ 2][ 3] however, some scholars ...

  14. Media Violence: The Effects Are Both Real and Strong

    Fifty years of research on the effect of TV violence on children leads to the inescapable conclusion that viewing media violence is related to increases in aggressive attitudes, values, and behaviors. The changes in aggression are both short term and long term, and these changes may be mediated by neurological changes in the young viewer.

  15. The Facts on Media Violence

    The Facts on Media Violence. In the wake of the Florida school shooting, politicians have raised concern over the influence of violent video games and films on young people, with the president ...

  16. PDF "Content Effects: Violence in the Media" in: The International

    Robust media violence efects have been found using diferent research methods, for example laboratory and field experiments, cross-sectional correlational studies, and longitudinal studies.

  17. New Evidence Suggests Media Violence Effects May Be Minimal

    New research over the past decade has suggested that links between media violence and child aggression are less clear than previously thought. How has our understanding of media violence effects changed?

  18. PDF Media and Violence

    Introduction As the debate continues about media's impact, some argue that research has "irrefutably" (Bushman & Huesmann, 2012) shown a causal link between media violence and aggressive behavior, while others say studies have shown "no evidence" (Suellentrop, 2012) of a relationship between video games and violence.

  19. Violence in the Media: What Effects on Behavior?

    In a 2009 Policy Statement on Media Violence, the American Academy of Pediatrics said, "Extensive research evidence indicates that media violence can contribute to aggressive behavior, desensitization to violence, nightmares, and fear of being harmed." 3. This year, the Media Violence Commission of the International Society for Research on ...

  20. Violence in the Media, History of Research on

    VIOLENCE IN THE MEDIA, HISTORY OF RESEARCH ONPublic controversy about violent content in the media has a long history that extends as far back as the first decade of the twentieth century in the United States. Source for information on Violence in the Media, History of Research on: Encyclopedia of Communication and Information dictionary.

  21. How Violent Media Can Impact Your Mental Health

    Constant Exposure to Violent Media Via Technology May Lead to Poorer Mental Health. Today, the violence shown on the news media may especially impact people's mental health. New technology means that violent events, including terrorist attacks, school shootings, and natural disasters, can be filmed and reported on immediately, and media ...

  22. SPSSI

    SPSSI Research Summary on Media Violence. Craig A. Anderson, Brad J. Bushman, Edward Donnerstein, Tom. A. Hummer, & Wayne Warburton. Read the executive summary here. Introduction. Media violence has long been a controversial topic, especially since the widespread adoption of television in the 1950s. This statement was inspired by several ...

  23. Expanding Bystander Behavioral Approaches to Address Racial Violence in

    However, racial violence in health research, pedagogy, and practice often shows up more covertly, like through epistemic injustice, deficits-based framing, and racial essentialism. We aim to expand how we think about bystanders and perpetrators of racial violence within health institutions, and how antiracism bystander behavioral approaches can ...

  24. Media entertainment as a self-regulatory resource: The recovery and

    A growing body of evidence suggests that both interactive and noninteractive entertainment media have a strong potential to facilitate recovery from stress and strain and to support the replenishment of physical and psychological resources. This chapter reviews latest developments in recovery theory and systematically summarize previous research on media-induced recovery.

  25. The Influence of Media Violence on Intimate Partner Violence

    Research suggests that the representation of violence against women in the media has resulted in an increased acceptance of attitudes favoring domestic violence. While prior work has investigated the relationship between violent media exposure and violent ...

  26. Gun Violence Is Down in Our Cities. Why Not Also in Our Schools?

    Arming teachers is ineffective, expensive, and clearly has not prevented violence on school grounds. Instead, a more comprehensive approach to protecting our youth is necessary. Preventing children's exposure to gun violence in their communities and stopping guns from coming into schools in the first place are both critical.

  27. Professor sheds light on gun violence as a public health issue

    The guests, many of whom had firsthand experiences with gun violence, led students in discussions of street outreach, participant engagement, hospital-based interventions, the role of media and other potential solutions to urban gun violence.

  28. What Research Tells Us about Political Violence

    This question has been at the heart of substantial political science and peace science research over the last five decades. The answers researchers have arrived at can help guide us on how to minimize political violence and move towards our goal of creating the fairest and most representative democracy possible.

  29. Deer Hunting Season and Firearm Violence in US Rural Counties

    Importance Firearm violence is a major public health problem in the US. However, relatively little research has focused particular attention on firearm violence in rural areas, and few studies have used research designs that draw on exogenous variation in the prevalence of firearms to estimate the association between firearm presence and shootings.

  30. Cureus

    Background: Violence against women has been one of the dreaded social evils that humanity is facing. There have been concerted efforts to eliminate this evil, and sustainable development goals goal 5.2.1 gave it a timeline. The current study was carried out to estimate the burden of domestic violence (DV) against women and to investigate the sociodemographic correlates of DV victims in India.