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Section Three. Key Areas of Research. Chapter 11. Effects of Media Violence. Media Violence Research Methods. Laboratory experiments Field Experiments Correlational surveys Longitudinal panel studies Natural experiments Intervention studies. Laboratory Experiments.
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Section Three Key Areas of Research
Chapter 11 Effects of Media Violence
Media Violence Research Methods • Laboratory experiments • Field Experiments • Correlational surveys • Longitudinal panel studies • Natural experiments • Intervention studies
Laboratory Experiments • Strictly controlled experiments • Designed to show a causal relationships
Field Experiments • Take place among children in an institutional setting • Avoid the problem of unnaturalness
Correlational Surveys • Survey conducted to find a correlation between consumption of violent media and aggressive behavior: • Viewers asked to read a list of program titles and select what they watch regularly • Amount of violent programming per viewer and aggressiveness or hostility is measured. • Two measures are correlated to ascertain any relationship between the two variables. • These studies ultimately cannot demonstrate a causal relationship with certainty.
Longitudinal Panel Studies • Identify relationships between consumption of violent fare and antisocial attitudes and behaviors that develop over time • Take into account that exposure to media violence has a cumulative effect over time
Natural Experiments • A longitudinal assessment is conducted in a natural setting where television is being introduced into the community for the first time.
Intervention Studies • Designed to inoculate viewers against the harmful effects of TV violence • Attempt to alleviate the negative effects • Increased television literacy may reduce negative effects
Measuring Violent Content • Content analysis • A research method used to determine the amount of violent content in TV programs • Message system analysis • Used to measure the amount of violence in the media
Measuring Violent Content (Cont’d) • Violence • “the overt expression of physical force against self or other compelling action against one’s will” • Violence profiles are developed for each television program based on the amount of violent content.
Measuring Viewer’s Perceptions • 5 key elements that make people susceptible to negative effects: • A perpetrator who is an attractive role model • Violence that seems justified • Violence that goes unpunished • Minimal consequences to the victims • Violence that seems realistic to the viewer
Meta-Analyses • when researchers examine a vast body of research studies and use statistical methods to combine their findings and look for an overall indication of effects as well as general trends • Have shown effects such as imitative behavior, fear and desensitization
The Psychological Impact of Media Violence • 3 levels of impact: • Behavioral • Affective • Cognitive
Behavioral Effects • 5 major mechanisms through which behavioral effects may occur: • Catharsis • Arousal • Disinhibition • Imitation • Desensitization
Behavioral Effects (Cont’d) • Catharsis • Viewers vent their aggressive impulses harmlessly through viewing televised violence. • Arousal • Viewing violent content may enhance aggression and anger due to excitement or emotional arousal. • Disinhibition • Viewers grow more accustomed to seeing violence on television and become less inhibited by social sanctions against committing violent acts.
Behavioral Effects (Cont’d) • Imitation • Viewers learn from what they see on television and try to mimic actions themselves. • Desensitization • Viewers repeatedly watch violent acts on TV and become less sensitive to seeing violence and more likely to accept real-life violence.
Affective or Emotional Effects • Effects may be short or long term • Fright reactions • Young children are more likely to be frightened by threatening characters and situations • Older children are more frightened by threats of either realistic or abstract stimuli
Coping Strategies • Help children reduce their fears • Cognitive strategy: • Change the child’s mental conceptions of the frightening content. • Non-cognitive strategy: • Desensitization- repeated exposure to the frightening matter in a secure atmosphere
Cognitive Effects Research: George Gerbner and Associates (1970s) • Regular exposure to mediated violence made viewers develop an exaggerated view of real-life dangers in society.
Cognitive Effects Research: Wober and Gunter (1982) • A person’s perception of the world can be mitigated by levels of judgment: • Program specificity • Viewer perceptions or interpretations • Personal judgments about crime • Situation specificity
Media Violence Research and Public Policy: History • Violence on Television (1996) • The Payne Fund Studies (1920s and 30s) • The Seduction of the Innocent (1954) • 1950s and 1960s, researchers found a connection between viewing televised violence and aggressive behavior among youngsters.
Media Violence Research and Public Policy: History (Cont’d) • National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (1960s) • Television is not the primary cause of violence. • Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior (1960s) • Viewing violence on television increased viewers’ tendencies to behave aggressively. • Children’s Television Act of 1990 • The Telecommunications Act of 1996
Media Violence Research and Public Policy: Future • Recent research has focused on reducing the negative consequences of viewing mediated violence. • As research continues, changes in public policy are inevitable. • Increased public awareness should make public policy makers more inclined to make positive changes.