Huesmann, L. R., Moise-Titus, J., Podolski, C., & Eron,
L. D. (2003). Longitudinal relations between children’s exposure to TV violence
and their aggressive and violent behavior in young adulthood: 1977-1992.
Developmental Psychology, 39, 201-221.
What is this study about?
There is increasing evidence that early exposure to media
violence is a contributing factor to the development of aggression. However,
much of the past research on media violence has focused on short-term effects
and reported significant relations only for boys. This study draws on
social-cognitive observational-learning theory, desensitization theory, and
social comparison theory to examine the longitudinal relationship between early
exposure to TV violence and adult aggressive behavior for both males and
females.
This study is a follow-up of the 3-year longitudinal study
conducted by Huesmann and his colleagues in 1977. In the original study, which
included 557 children from five countries (aged 6-10 years), researchers
gathered information on childhood TV-violence viewing, identification with
aggressive TV characters, judgments of realism of TV violence, aggressive
behavior, and intellectual ability, as well as parents’ socioeconomic status
(measured by educational level), aggressiveness, parenting practices and
attitudes, and parent’s TV usage (i.e., TV-viewing frequency and TV-violence
viewing).
In this follow-up study, researchers interviewed and
gathered collateral data (i.e., archival records and interviews of spouses and
friends) on 329 participants from the original sample. At the time of the
follow-up, the participants ranged in age from 20 to 25 years. Researchers
administered measures of adult TV-violence viewing and adult aggressive
behavior, and obtained archival data on criminal conviction and moving
violation records from state records.
What did the study find?
The results of this study revealed that early childhood
exposure to TV violence predicted aggressive behavior for both males and
females in adulthood. Additionally, identification with same sex aggressive TV
characters, as well as participants’ ratings of perceived realism of TV
violence, also predicted adult aggression in both males and females.
Furthermore, while a positive relationship was found between early aggression
and subsequent TV violence viewing, the effect was not significant. These
findings suggest that, while aggressive children may choose to watch more
violent TV programming, it is more plausible that early childhood exposure to
TV violence stimulates increases in aggression later in adulthood.
Gender differences were also observed in the expression of
aggression. Specifically, men were more likely to engage in serious physical
aggression and criminality, whereas women were more likely to engage in forms
of indirect aggression. Men and women reported similar frequencies of engaging
in verbal aggression, general aggression, and aggression toward spouses. For
men, the effects were exacerbated by their identification with same sex
characters and perceptions of realism in TV violence.
The longitudinal relationships observed in this study held
true, even after controlling for the effects of early aggressive behavior in
childhood, socioeconomic status, intellectual ability, and various parenting
factors. These findings support the hypothesis that the causal effects of media
violence exposure found in laboratory settings can be generalized to real life
from childhood to adulthood.
How does this relate to the ACT Against Violence program?
Children are increasingly becoming heavy media consumers.
Research indicates that much of the media directed at children contains violent
content. While media violence exposure may have short-term effects on adults,
its negative impact on children is enduring. As this study suggests, early
exposure to TV violence places both male and female children at risk for the
development of aggressive and violent behavior in adulthood. The ACT program
addresses the impact of media violence on the development of young children,
and teaches parents strategies for reducing their children’s exposure to media
violence.
No comments:
Post a Comment