Priming Effects of Media Violence on the Accessibility of Aggressive Constructs in Memory

Two experiments tested the hypothesis that violent media make aggressive constructs more accessible to viewers. In Experiment 1, participants made free associations to homonyms, with one meaning more aggressive than the other; and to nonaggressive words after viewing a violent or nonviolent video. Participants who saw the violent video listed more aggressive associations to both types of words. In Experiment 2, participants completed a lexical-decision task after viewing a violent or nonviolent video. Participants pressed one key if a string of letters was an English word, or another key if it was a nonword. Half of the words were aggressive and half were nonaggressive. Participants who saw the violent video had faster reaction times to aggressive words. Videotape content did not influence reaction times to nonaggressive words. These results suggest that violent media prime cognitive-associative networks related to aggression.

[1]  Stephen W. Kohlmeyer Picture Perception Lab: A program for picture perception experiments on the Macintosh II , 1992 .

[2]  J. Bargh,et al.  Automatic information processing and social perception: The influence of trait information presented outside of conscious awareness on impression formation. , 1982 .

[3]  D. Cervone,et al.  Social inference and individual differences in aggression: Evidence for spontaneous judgments of hostility , 1995 .

[4]  Marcia K. Johnson,et al.  Human learning and memory. , 1987, Annual review of psychology.

[5]  K. Fleming Phonologically Mediated Priming in Spoken and Printed Word Recognition , 1993 .

[6]  Leonard Berkowitz,et al.  WEAPONS AS AGGRESSION-ELICITING STIMULI. , 1967 .

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

[8]  Brad J. Bushman,et al.  Role of cognitive-emotional mediators and individual differences in the effects of media violence on aggression. , 1990 .

[9]  J. Morton 7 – A Functional Model for Memory1 , 1970 .

[10]  N. Branscombe,et al.  Person perception when aggressive or nonaggressive sports are primed , 1990 .

[11]  J. Bruner On perceptual readiness. , 1957, Psychological review.

[12]  Héctor Betancourt,et al.  A Cognition (Attribution)-Emotion Model of Violence in Conflict Situations , 1992 .

[13]  M. Orne On the social psychology of the psychological experiment: With particular reference to demand characteristics and their implications. , 1962 .

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

[15]  K. Dodge,et al.  Hostile attributional biases in severely aggressive adolescents. , 1990, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[16]  B. Bushman,et al.  Moderating role of trait aggressiveness in the effects of violent media on aggression. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[17]  K. Dodge,et al.  Social Information-Processing Bases of Aggressive Behavior in Children , 1990 .

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

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

[20]  G. Bower Mood and memory. , 1981, The American psychologist.

[21]  J. Leyens,et al.  Priming aggressive thoughts: The effect of the anticipation of a violent movie upon the aggressive behaviour of the spectators , 1991 .

[22]  Eyal M. Reingold,et al.  Comparing Direct (Explicit) and Indirect (Implicit) Measures to Study Unconscious Memory , 1991 .

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

[24]  C. Carver,et al.  Modeling: An analysis in terms of category accessibility. , 1983 .

[25]  Craig A. Anderson,et al.  Examining an Affective Aggression Framework Weapon and Temperature Effects on Aggressive Thoughts, Affect, and Attitudes , 1996 .

[26]  J. Grainger,et al.  Phonology and Orthography in Visual Word Recognition: Effects of Masked Homophone Primes , 1994 .

[27]  H L Roediger,et al.  Implicit memory. Retention without remembering. , 1990, The American psychologist.

[28]  Attributions of aggressive and nonagressive African-American male early adolescents: A study of construct accessibility. , 1994 .

[29]  R. Geen,et al.  Name-mediated aggressive cue properties. , 1966, Journal of personality.

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

[31]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  A Bio‐Informational Theory of Emotional Imagery , 1979 .

[32]  Craig A. Anderson,et al.  Effects of violent movies and trait hostility on hostile feelings and aggressive thoughts , 1997 .

[33]  Paul F. Segord Objectification of Word-Association Procedures by the Use of Homonyms: A Measure of Body Cathexis1 , 1953 .

[34]  J. Fleiss,et al.  Intraclass correlations: uses in assessing rater reliability. , 1979, Psychological bulletin.

[35]  D. Schacter Implicit memory: History and current status. , 1987 .