Screen violence tied to boys' aggression: study
By Andrew Stern
Yahoo News
November 5, 2007
Boys aged 2 to 5 who viewed
an hour of on-screen violence a day increased their
chances of being overly aggressive later in childhood,
but the association was not seen in girls, researchers
said on Monday.
"This new study provides further evidence of how
important and powerful television and media are as young
children develop," study author Dr. Dimitri Christakis
of Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute said.
"Of 184 boys (in the study), 25 of them had serious
problems with aggression and for each hour on average
per day they had watched violent TV, they were three
times more likely to be in that group" than those who
did not watch violent programming, Christakis said in a
telephone interview.
Christakis and fellow researchers, writing in the
journal Pediatrics, analyzed the television and video
viewing habits of 330 children aged 2 to 5, then
assessed their behavior five years later.
Christakis said many parents may be unaware that the
shows or video games their young children watch are
violent or inappropriate for their age group.
"Kids that age can't distinguish fantasy from reality"
and need it explained to them, he said. "Cartoon
violence teaches kids that violence is funny and without
consequence. So when people in cartoons have their heads
flattened and they pop right back out and kids laugh at
it, they really are thinking there are no serious
consequence to hitting someone in the head, which
obviously isn't true in the real world."
TRAJECTORY OF AGGRESSION
Aggression is evident even in infants, but "the toddler
and preschool years constitute the time during which
most children learn to use nonaggressive alternatives
... . When that does not occur, young children can
continue on a trajectory of aggression," the study said.
The aggressiveness identified in the study when the
children reached the ages of 7 to 10 -- being mean to
others without regret, destructiveness, disobedience at
school -- could presage bad behavior into adolescence
and adulthood, said Christakis, citing previous studies.
The association between violent programming and overly
aggressive behavior was not found among the 146 girls in
the study, who tended to watch more educational and
nonviolent shows than the boys, Christakis said.
Boys may be more genetically predisposed to aggression,
"so the same level of exposure brings out aggression in
them where it doesn't in girls. It also could be boys
are socialized to respond aggressively," he said.
"We'll be launching an experimental study in kids this
age and try to reduce the amount of violent TV they
watch and increase the amount of pro-social programs --
which should tell us a lot more," Christakis said.
