Television violence and children's aggression: testing the priming, social script, and disinhibition predictions.

The effect of television violence on boys' aggression was investigated with consideration of teacher-rated characteristic aggressiveness, timing of frustration, and violence-related cues as moderators. Boys in Grades 2 and 3 (N = 396) watched violent or nonviolent TV in groups of 6, and half the groups were later exposed to a cue associated with the violent TV program. They were frustrated either before or after TV viewing. Aggression was measured by naturalistic observation during a game of floor hockey. Groups containing more characteristically high-aggressive boys showed higher aggression following violent TV plus the cue than following violent TV alone, which in turn produced more aggression than did the nonviolent TV condition. There was evidence that both the violent content and the cue may have suppressed aggression among groups composed primarily of boys low in characteristic aggressiveness. Results were interpreted in terms of current information-processing theories of media effects on aggression.

[1]  L. R. Huesmann,et al.  Psychological Processes Promoting the Relation Between Exposure to Media Violence and Aggressive Behavior by the Viewer , 1986 .

[2]  R. Geen,et al.  The Immediate Effects of Media Violence on Behavior , 1986 .

[3]  Leonard Berkowitz,et al.  Situational Influences on Reactions to Observed Violence. , 1986 .

[4]  B. Hesse,et al.  Naturalistic Studies of the Long‐Term Effects of Television Violence , 1986 .

[5]  Jennings Bryant,et al.  Perspectives on Media Effects , 1986 .

[6]  J. Freedman,et al.  Effect of television violence on aggressiveness. , 1984, Psychological bulletin.

[7]  L. Berkowitz,et al.  Some effects of thoughts on anti- and prosocial influences of media events: a cognitive-neoassociation analysis. , 1984, Psychological bulletin.

[8]  L. R. Huesmann Television: Ally or Enemy? , 1984 .

[9]  Horst Stipp,et al.  Television and aggression : a panel study , 1984 .

[10]  D. A. Kenny The NBC Study and Television Violence , 1984 .

[11]  L. Berkowitz,et al.  Audience effects when viewing aggressive movies. , 1984, The British journal of social psychology.

[12]  L. R. Huesmann,et al.  Television violence and aggressive behavior. , 1984 .

[13]  T. Cook,et al.  The implicit assumptions of television research: an analysis of the 1982 NIMH report on television and behavior. , 1983, Public opinion quarterly.

[14]  L. R. Huesmann,et al.  Age trends in the development of aggression, sex typing, and related television habits. , 1983 .

[15]  J. Landman,et al.  Social Cognition: Some Historical and Theoretical Perspectives , 1983 .

[16]  E. Pedhazur Multiple Regression in Behavioral Research: Explanation and Prediction , 1982 .

[17]  David Sohn On Eron on Television Violence and Aggression. , 1982 .

[18]  R. Kaplan TV violence and aggression revisited again. , 1982 .

[19]  D. Pearl,et al.  Television and behavior : ten years of scientific progress and implications for the eighties , 1982 .

[20]  B. Watkins,et al.  The Effects of TV Action and Violence on Children's Social Behavior , 1981 .

[21]  David Sohn Television violence and aggression revisited. , 1981 .

[22]  L. Eron Prescription for reduction of aggression. , 1980, The American psychologist.

[23]  James V. Jucker,et al.  A Response , 1979 .

[24]  L. R. Huesmann,et al.  Growing up to be violent : a longitudinal study of the development of aggression , 1977 .

[25]  S. Feshbach The Role of Fantasy in the Response to Television , 1976 .

[26]  Jacob Cohen,et al.  Applied multiple regression/correlation analysis for the behavioral sciences , 1979 .

[27]  Allan Collins,et al.  A spreading-activation theory of semantic processing , 1975 .

[28]  D. Howitt,et al.  Mass media, violence and society , 1975 .

[29]  L. Berkowitz,et al.  Some determinants of impulsive aggression: role of mediated associations with reinforcements for aggression. , 1974, Psychological review.

[30]  Endel Tulving,et al.  Encoding specificity and retrieval processes in episodic memory. , 1973 .

[31]  G. Bower,et al.  Human Associative Memory , 1973 .

[32]  L. Berkowitz,et al.  Identification with film aggressor (covert role taking) and reactions to film violence. , 1972, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[33]  A. Bandura Aggression: a social learning analysis , 1971 .

[34]  D. P. Hartmann,et al.  Effects of adult and peer observers on boys' and girls' responses to an aggressive model. , 1971, Child development.

[35]  Seymour Feshbach,et al.  Television and aggression , 1971 .

[36]  L. Eron,et al.  Learning of aggression in children , 1971 .

[37]  Leonard Berkowitz,et al.  The Frustration-Aggression Hypothesis Revisited , 1969 .

[38]  D J Hicks,et al.  Effects of co-observer's sanctions and adult presence on imitative aggression. , 1968, Child development.

[39]  R. Geen,et al.  Some conditions facilitating the occurrence of aggression after the observation of violence. , 1967, Journal of personality.

[40]  R. Geen,et al.  Stimulus qualities of the target of aggression: a further study. , 1967, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[41]  A. Bandura,et al.  Observational learning as a function of symbolization and incentive set. , 1966, Child development.

[42]  L. Berkowitz,et al.  Aggression: A Social Psychological Analysis. , 1964 .

[43]  A. Bandura,et al.  VICARIOUS REINFORCEMENT AND IMITATIVE LEARNING. , 1963, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[44]  P. Lazarsfeld Why Is So Little Known About the Effects of Television on Children and What Can Be Done? Testimony Before the Kefauver Committee on Juvenile Delinquency , 1955 .

[45]  S. Fiske,et al.  The Handbook of Social Psychology , 1935 .