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Effects of prosocial portrayals on television on social behavior. Meta-analysis of studies of prosocial portrayals. Marie-Louise Mares (1996) Sponsored by Annenberg Public Policy Center, University of Pennsylvania.
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Effects of prosocial portrayals on television on social behavior
Meta-analysis of studies of prosocial portrayals • Marie-Louise Mares (1996) • Sponsored by Annenberg Public Policy Center, University of Pennsylvania
“It is commonly held that television viewing does more harm than good, especially to young audiences.”
“Prosocial” • “it is not as easy as it first seems to sort out which behaviors are positive and which are negative. This is more than a hazy relativism. It is naïve to assume that all groups in society place equal value on cooperation (rather than rugged individualism), tolerance of others (rather than willingness to stick up for one’s own group), nonviolent conflict resolution (rather than heroism), or ability to resist temptation (rather than ability to seize the moment). Nonetheless, all these have been used as prosocial outcomes in research.”
“Effects are strongest when the behavior that is modeled is salient, clearly portrayed, and can be easily incorporated into a child’s everyday interactions” • Kotler, p. 817
Altruism • Children who were given tokens, then shown portrayals of a model acting generously, (donating prize money to charity) were more likely to donate tokens to charity compared to children who watched a model behave selfishly (cashing in winnings for a big prize) or in a neutral manner
Positive interactions • Lynette Friedrich and AlethaHuston-Stein found that children who had viewed Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood exhibited more friendly behavior in the school playground compared to those who viewed neutral content. Studies of Barney and Friends indicate that children learn about cooperation and friendship through viewing the show.
Self-control and persistence • Studies of self-control include programs that focus on resistance to temptation, obedience to rules, and persistence at a task. The self-control studies are often set up as lab experiments similar to the studies on altruism. Many studies conducted in the 1970s indicated that children who view models who are able to resist temptation (e.g., resisting playing with a forbidden toy, eating forbidden food) are more likely to demonstrate self-control compared to children who view models who indulge in forbidden activities.
In a more recent study, children who viewed 20 episodes of Dragon Tales, a show designed to encourage children to pursue challenges, more frequently chose to pursue challenging tasks, compared to those who were not exposed to the series.
Reduction of stereotypes • Early evaluations of Sesame Street found that Caucasian preschoolers had more positive attitudes toward African Americans and Latino Americans after viewing Sesame Street over the course of the 2-year study. • A more recent study of the Israeli-Palestinian production of Sesame Street showed that viewing led to an increase in prosocial problem solving and more positive attitudes toward children of the other group.
Content characteristics • Portrayals can be transferred to children’s lives • Likely to occur in their own lives (including other kids v. comfort for loss) • Reality v. fictional story
Combining prosocial and violent content may backfire • Linda Silverman found that 3-year olds who saw a Sesame Street segment with conflict followed by resolution were less cooperative • Marsha Liss and Lauri Reinhardt found that combinations of prosocial and antisocial acts in the cartoon series Superfriends led to more aggressive behavior than either prosocial or antisocial depictions alone
Viewer characteristics • Prosocial depictions have similar effect on • Boys and girls • Kids of different races or ethnicity • May be more effective for kids from middle- or upper-class homes • Effect of prosocial content appears to increase between ages of 3 and 7, and then decline
Context • The effect of prosocial content is enhanced by adult coviewing • Parents in the home • Teachers in school • Supplementary materials enhance impact
Prosocial content • Greenberg and colleagues analyzed the favorite programs of a sample of fourth, sixth, and eighth graders. They found that these programs contained an average of 44.2 acts of prosocial behavior in an average hour. The prosocial behavior included displays of altruism and empathy and discussion of feelings. The researchers also found that the violence was just as frequent, however. A recent study conducted by Deborah Weber and Dorothy Singer analyzed the favorite programs and videos viewed by children age 2 and under. They found many occurrences of prosocialbehavior, including sharing, helping, and manners. For example, in the video Sesame Street: Learning to Share, there were 45 instances of positive social behaviors.
Commercials • Commercials also contain examples of prosocial behavior. In one study, prosocial behavior appeared in 59% of all children’s commercials. Friendly behaviors were the most common forms of prosocialbehavior, with 42% of all commercials containing examples of affection between characters. Helping and teaching were common altruistic behaviors, appearing in 21% of all commercials. Mary Strom Larson analyzed 595 commercials in children’s programming and found that commercials depicting only girls showed almost all cooperative interactions (i.e., 85% of the time). Mixed boy and girl commercials primarily portrayed cooperative interactions (51%), compared to boys only commercials, which contained primarily competitiverinteractions.—Jennifer A. Kotler
V. O. Lovelace and A. C. Huston have identified three strategies for modeling prosocial behavior for children through the media. • Present characters who exhibit only prosocial behavior. • Could be boring • Incorporate story lines in which characters resolve conflict by making prosocial choices. Positive consequences are attributed to prosocial behavior and negative consequences to antisocial behavior. • Concern over modeling of antisocial behaviors • Present both prosocial and antisocial behaviors without presenting a resolution within the program. Rather, the viewer is asked to offer his or her own solution to the presented conflict. • considered most effective in classroom or therapeutic settings, where an adult can supervise postviewing discussion or activity.
Impact of viewing prosocial behavior • Just as in learning violent behavior, prosocialbehavior can be learned by observation • Prosocial behavior can be induced by emotional responses to television portrayals • Unlike violent portrayals (according to Rushton), there is a social norm to help one another
Rushton: • “If we asked a stranger in the street for directions, we would expect him or her to provide the information if possible and to apologize if not. If the stranger were instead to turn to us and say ‘Yes I do know where that place is but I can’t be bothered to tell you,’ we would be rather surprised.”
Differences among individuals • “Research on prosocial behavior finds that individuals tend to be consistent in the degree to which they display prosocial behavior, but there is some variation between individuals.” • Likely that prosocial acts receive spontaneous reward • Media effects should be at least as strong for prosocial as for violent portrayals
Sample of studies • 1966-1995 • Studies included if they: • Involved exposure to television content deemed prosocial or positive by the researchers, • Measured a relevant behavioral outcome of exposure, and • Contained enough statistical information to allow for calculation of effect sizes • Different age groups and different genders were treated as separate samples • Yield: 39 usable sources; 185 effect sizes
Susan Hearold • “A synthesis of 1043 effects of television on social behavior” • 1986 • Covers both prosocial and antisocial effects • 230 studies • 1,043 treatment comparisons
Outline of studies in sample • 170 published, 60 unpublished • 131 lab experiments, 33 field experiments, 66 surveys • 9 pre-1950; 10 from 1950-1959; 36 from 1960-1969; 175 from 1970-1977
What do we mean by “prosocial” • Not as easy to define as one might think • Which is more important, the intent or the effect? • “The road to hell is paved with good intentions” • “Enlightened self-interest” • Without intent, any good outcome suddenly becomes evidence of moral behavior • When one group benefits and another is disadvantaged, is the act “prosocial”? • Can one benefit from “pro-social” behavior? Can one’s family?
“Prosocial” working definition • For our use, a person will engage in prosocial behavior when she intentionally commits any act which will be likely to improve her own condition or the condition of someone else • One can (and as we see later, hopefully does) feel good about the act • If one is compelled to act in a certain way then she is not acting prosocially, though the person requiring the act may be • Contributions to Red Cross taken out of your check while the boss looks on
What kinds of prosocial acts have been proposed? • Altruism • Control of aggressive impulses • Delay of gratification/task persistence • Explaining feelings of self or others • Reparation for bad behavior • Resistance to temptation • Sympathy • Liebert & Sprafkin
Prosocial effects • Minor part of effects study • Most study in late 70s and early 80s • Findings reviewed in a number of meta-analyses • Rushton • Hearold • Paik • Mares
Most common concern is the learning of prosocial behavior by children (socialization) • Part of the 1960s-1970s concern over the development of television as an educational medium • Educational content • Prosocial content • Often the two are combined (Sesame Street)
Prosocial effects • Conclusions • Prosocial content can lead to positive behavioral outcomes • Effects of prosocial comparable in strength to antisocial • Scholars disagree on which is stronger • Altruism most effective prosocial portrayal
Prosocial effects • Effect of prosocial content on boys not significantly different from the effect on girls • Paik, 1995 • Greater effect for family sitcoms than for educational programming • Effects positive for all ages • Higher effect for donation than for prosocial play or cooperation • Effect of stereotyping greater than effect of anti-stereotyping content
Hearold, 1986 • Synthesis of 1043studies of effects of television on social behavior • “Effect sizes for prosocial treatments and behavior, of course, were consistently greater than for antisocial treatments on behavior.” • “The implication is that if subjects watched the antisocial treatments, usually violent programs or episodes, they would be elevated from the 50th to the 62nd percentile in antisocial behavior, typically physical aggression, and if they watched the prosocial treatment, they would be elevated from the 50th to the 74th percentile in prosocial behavior, typically altruism.”
Critique of studies • Stimulus materials usually either: • depictions of prosocial behavior developed specifically to elicit the behavior, or • Either Mister Rogers Neighborhood or Sesame Street • Normal tv fare sends mixed messages • prosocial violence • characters exhibiting good and bad behaviors
Prosocial content research • Liebert, Sprafkin, Rubinstein and others • mid 70s • Greenberg et al. • late 70s • Baxter & Kaplan • early 80s • Lee • Potter & Ware • late 80s
Behaviors chosen • Positive interaction • Friendly/nonagressive interactions • Expressions of affection • Peaceable conflict resolution • Altruism • Sharing • Donating • Offering help • Comforting
Behaviors chosen (cont’d) • Self-control • Resistance to temptation • Obedience to rules • Ability to work independently • Persistence at a task • Anti-stereotyping • Attitudes • Beliefs
Distribution of prosocial acts on Saturday morning TV, 1970s