Computerspiele in Unserer Gesellschaft

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 22

Violent Video Games and Public Policy 1

Violent Video Games and Public Policy


Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson

Center for the Study of Violence


Iowa State University

Chapter in Tobias Bevc & Holger Zapf (Eds.) (pp. 227-240), Wie wir spielen, was wir werden:
Computerspiele in unserer Gesellschaft.

Konstanz: UVK Verlagsgesellschaft, 2009


Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 2

Violent Video Games and Public Policy


Abstract
The impact that violent video games have on aggressive behavior is a serious
topic, with implications for video game players and non-players, school teachers, parents,
and society, as a whole. Over two decades of empirical work using a variety of research
methods has found conclusive evidence that violent video game play causes later
aggressive behavior. However, to date, there are few public policies that effectively limit
childrens consumption of such violent media. The current chapter describes the results
of empirical findings on violent video games and aggression, some of the barriers related
to implementing effective public policy, and the current state of public policy concerning
violent video games in the United States and in Europe.
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 3

Violent Video Games and Public Policy


I have been playing violent video games since I was young and I have not gone out and
punched people or shot anybody.

This quote (paraphrased from a internet chat room) emphasizes the common
misperception that many video game players and parents of these players have towards
the effects that violent video games have on aggressive behavior: I see violent media
daily and I do not want to kill anybody. Therefore, violent video games don't affect me.
The question of whether violent video game play is related to negative behavioral
consequences (i.e., aggression) is not new, nor are the attempts by the scientific
community to communicate these findings to public policy makers. However, rarely does
effective public policy concerning media violence get implemented. To support this
claim, consider the following questions:
1. Does the scientific literature continually show strong relationships between
violent media and aggressive thoughts, aggressive feelings, and aggressive
behaviors? Yes (see Anderson, 2004; Kirsh, 2006).
2. Have the leading media violence experts testified before their governing body
stating that violent media increases the probability of aggression in consumers? -
Yes (see Anderson, Berkowitz, Donnerstein, Huesmann, Johnson, Linz,
Malamuth, & Wartella, 2003).
3. Are children still consuming violent mass media regularly? Yes (see
Anderson, Gentile, & Buckley, 2007).
4. Are there effective policies in the United States that minimize the
consumption of violent media by children of certain ages (e.g., under 15 years
old)? No (see Anderson & Gentile, 2008).
Thus, scientific research has found evidence to suggest that violent media consumption,
including violent video games, increases the probability of thinking, feeling, and
behaving aggressively in children and adults. These findings have been explicitly
communicated to public policy makers. However, children still get a steady diet of
violent media. Why is there such a huge disconnection between the scientific evidence of
harm and public policy? To adequately answer this question, this chapter is organized
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 4

into three sections: the scientific evidence, public policy concerning the mass media, and
the disconnect between the scientific community and the public.
Scientific Evidence
Media violence is just one of many risk factors for aggression. It is beyond the
scope of this chapter to discuss all of the known risk factors for aggression and violence,
but what will be explained is the scientific research which has found a relationship
between media violence and subsequent aggression. These findings will be organized by
type of research design.
The first type is the cross-sectional correlational design. A correlation represents a
relationship between two variables. For example, there is a relationship between height
and weight, such that taller people typically weigh more. This is a positive correlation,
because as the values of one variable (height) increase, so do the values of the other
variable (weight). A negative correlation occurs when increases in the values of one
variable are associated with decreases in the values of the other variable. For example,
there is a negative relationship between the number of times a college student misses
class and their grade in that class. Thus, as the number of times one misses class
increases, grades tend to decrease. A weakness of cross-sectional correlational studies is
that by themselves, they do not clearly establish causality, mainly because other variables
are not typically controlled. For example, there is a strong positive correlation between
ice cream sales and the number of murders. Does this mean that eating ice cream causes
murders? No, rather ice cream sales occur most when it is hot outside and there is a
positive relationship between heat and aggression (Anderson, Anderson, Dorr, DeNeve,
& Flanagan, 2000). However, well designed correlational studies are useful for testing
the generalizability of experimental findings and for testing alternative explanations.
Researchers using cross-sectional correlational designs have found that the
amount of time participants play violent video games is positively correlated with
aggressive delinquency (Anderson & Dill, 2000). Other research looking at different
outcomes have found similar findings. For instance, Krahe and Moller (2004) found a
significant positive relation between violent video game exposure and the endorsement of
physical aggressive norms, suggesting that as the amount of violent video game play time
increased, there was an increase in the acceptance to use physical aggression. Others
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 5

(e.g., Gentile, Lynch, Linder, & Walsh, 2004) found similar results, while statistically
controlling for sex of the participant and trait hostility, ruling out these factors as
alternative explanations of the correlation between violent video games and physical
aggression.
A second type of research design is experimental. Such studies can yield strong
causal answers because they effectively rule out all alternative explanations. The
hallmark of experiments is that participants are randomly assigned to the different
conditions of the study. In addition, good experiments attempt to control for other
variables that could influence the dependent variable (i.e., gender, trait aggression).
Scientists can say that the independent variable (exposure to media violence) causes
changes in the dependent variable (aggression).
Researchers using experimental designs have found that having participants play a
violent video game causes higher aggression levels than having them play a non-violent
video game (e.g., Ballard & Wiest, 1996). This effect occurs across a wide variety of
individual difference variables. For instance, this effect has been demonstrated in
children (Irwin & Gross, 1995) and college-aged samples (Carnagey & Anderson, 2005),
high and low trait aggressive individuals, and males and females (e.g., Anderson, Gentile,
& Buckley, 2007). Also, this effect has been found for a wide variety of video game
types, including fighting video games (Ballard & Lineberger, 1999), shooting video
games (Ivory & Kalyanaraman, 2007), and driving video games (Carnagey & Anderson,
2005).
A third type of study is a longitudinal design, in which the same participants are
measured at least twice over time. Well-designed longitudinal studies also can provide
strong support for causal hypotheses, again because they effectively rule out many
alternative explanations. Such research has found that repeated exposure to violent video
games is related to increased aggression (Anderson, Gentile, & Buckley, 2007).
Finally, meta-analysis is a statistical technique which takes all of the scientific
research done in an area of interest and aggregates the findings to answer global
questions of the form: Across the entire spectrum of research involving violent video
game play, is exposure to this type of media violence related to aggression? This
technique is advantageous because it is less susceptible to reviewer biases than the typical
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 6

narrative review. Furthermore, by averaging all of the empirical research done in a given
area, one can better estimate the size of the effect. Findings from meta-analyses reveal
that exposure to violent video games is related to heightened aggressive feelings,
aggressive thoughts, physiological arousal, aggressive behavior, and to a decrease in
prosocial behavior (Anderson, 2004; Anderson & Bushman, 2001; Sherry, 2001).
Further, the average effects are sufficiently large to warrant public concern. For instance,
Bushman and Anderson (2002) reported that the effect size relating video game violence
to aggression was larger than many effects that have led to effective and costly public
health policies, such as the effects of second-hand tobacco smoke on lung cancer, or the
effect of lead exposure on reduced IQ in children. Similarly, the long term effect of video
game violence on later aggression and violence is larger than most known risk factors for
adolescent violence, such as abusive parents, poverty, and antisocial parents (Anderson,
Gentile, & Buckley, 2007).
Overall, the wealth of research on media violence and aggression has concluded
that both one-time and repeated exposure to violent acts in the mass media increase the
likelihood of aggression. This finding is consistent across a multitude of research designs,
and. most importantly, there does not appear to be any identifiable group (e.g., age, sex,
personality type) that is immune to these effects.
Public Policy Concerning the Mass Media
The United States of America
The staggering number of hours that individuals spend viewing mass media
violence coupled with the ever increasing realism of television, film, and video game
technology should be sufficient to warrant public policy action. By public policy, we
mean specific governmental actions designed to reduce the exposure of youth to this
known hazard -- media violence. This could include policies designed to educate
consumers about the harmful effects of media violence, creation of better rating systems,
inducements to enforce restrictions, and other forms of intervention (see Gentile &
Anderson, 2006).
In the United States, there have been several relevant governmental and
nongovernmental health organization reviews and reports presented before Congress
clearly stating that research has found that media violence has harmful effects (e.g., the
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 7

1954 Kefauver hearings; the 1969 National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of
Violence; the 1972 Surgeon Generals report Television and Growing Up [US Surgeon
Generals Scientific Advisory Committee, 1972]; the 1982 National Institute of Mental
Health [NIMH] report Television and Behavior; and Eron, Gentry, & Schlegels 1994
report for the American Psychological Association). Recently in 2000, six medical and
public health professional organizations (American Academy of Pediatrics, American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Medical Association, American
Psychological Association, American Academy of Family Physicians, and American
Psychiatric Association) submitted a Joint Statement on the Impact of Entertainment
Violence on Children to the Congressional Public Health Summit, which stated that
entertainment violence can lead to increases in aggressive attitudes, values, and
behavior, particularly in children. This statement also noted that the research points to a
causal connection between media violence and aggressive behavior in some children
(Joint Statement, 2000, p. 1).
Although this latter example is not specific to only video game findings, there
have been several advancements in public policy concerning violent video game
restrictions in the United States. Pressure was first put on the video game industry in
1993 by two United States Senators. In response, the video game industry adopted a
rating system that included the placement of an age-based rating symbol on video game
boxes as well as content descriptors, to provide information about the content of the
video game to parents and children and to the retailers who sell or rent video games. This
voluntary system was supposed to restrict children's and adolescents' access to video
games with content deemed too mature. The Entertainment Software Ratings Board
(ESRB) was created in 1994 to implement such policy.
In order to make sure that the video game retailers and industry was complying
with this mandate, in 1996 the United States Senate asked the National Institute on Media
and the Family to conduct an annual Video and Computer Game Report Card (VGRC) to
document how well the video game industry was complying with the rating system.
Initially, this report card revealed that the video game industry was doing well, but after a
while, the report card revealed that many rental and retail outlets failed to enforced the
video game ratings. Furthermore, it was learned that the video game industry was
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 8

targeting children with advertisements for video games that were deemed inappropriate
for them to play.
Heavy violent media exposure was partially blamed for the 1999 Columbine High
School shootings. President Bill Clinton asked the Federal Trade Commission to
investigate who was purchasing and renting which types of video games. The results
revealed that the majority of M rated video games (for Mature, 17 years and older) were
explicitly marketed to children, and that adolescents, aged 13-16, could purchase these
games 83% of the time (FTC, 2000). Thus, it was clear that the ratings system was not
working. The video game industry then created the Advertising Review Council to
establish policy to monitor the promoting and packaging of video games.
In 2000, the United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation held a hearing on the effects that interactive violence had on children,
where scientific media violence experts reported on the current state of the research
findings. The video game industry subsequently denied that there was any credible
evidence of harm.
Although it may appear that the video game industry is taking appropriate steps
(e.g., creating the rating system in response to the United States Senate), research on the
video game rating system shows that this is not the case. Walsh and Gentile (2001) and
Haninger and Thompson (2004) among others, have found that the ratings systems do not
accurately reflect the content in the video games.
The current U.S. video game rating system consists of age-appropriate lettering
(AO for adult only, M for Mature, T for Teen, E+ for everybody ten years or older, E for
everybody six years or older, and EC for everybody aged three and older). However,
according to Gentile, Humphrey, and Walsh (2005), parents often state that they would
prefer content-based ratings, rather than age-appropriate lettering (Bushman & Cantor,
2003). Gentile et al. (2005) created a detailed description of a proposed universal media
rating system and the factors that are associated with such a system. Three of these
factors consist of showing reliabilities between those who rate these games for content,
providing age-relevant information, and (most importantly) providing content-based
information, including the research findings on the effects of violent media on children,
which is currently not available on the video game packages.
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 9

Based on these research findings, the growing concerns voiced by parent groups
and child advocates, and the production and distribution of more realistic and graphically
violent and sexual video games, the United States Senate proposed the Family
Entertainment Protection Act in 2005 and 2006. This Act would get the U.S.
Government involved in examining the quality and evaluation of the video game rating
systems. Specifically, this bill would impose stiff financial penalties (up to $5,000) for
those who sell or distribute video games to minors that are inappropriate for them to play.
Also, the Children and Media Research and Advancement Act was proposed, which
allowed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to conduct a scientific
investigations into the effects that violent media has on all types of children. However,
neither of these proposals became law (see Table 1).
European Countries
The effects that violent mass media consumption (including hours spent playing
violent video games) has on children is not specific to the United States. Concerns over
what kids are viewing and playing has been documented in several European Union
countries (Italy, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden). All have been
concerned about such violent media effects, and have tried to implement public policy
(Aroldi, 2003). According to von Feilitzen and Carlsson (1999) there are two multi-
national efforts in an attempt to shape public policy regarding media violence (including
video games). The first is the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child,
which produced a document containing several articles related to media violence
consumption. Article 17 is concerned about the mass media in context, which includes
encouraging educational media, for example, but is also concerned about developing
guidelines for protecting children from information and materials that may be harmful to
the childs well-being (www.unicef.org/crc). However, because each country has
different laws and governmental policy regarding the mass media, each country can
implement the suggestions of these guidelines at their discretion (Hammarberg, 1998).
Several European countries have a video game rating system formed by
governmental pressure to restrict violent video game access by children. In the United
Kingdom, the Entertainment and Leisure Software Publishers Association (ELSPA) was
formed in 1989 to bring the content of video and computer games to the attention of the
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 10

government. This organization, in 1993, created the Video Standards Council (VSC) to
create an age-related video game rating system.
More recently the European Union created a new rating system, adopted by the
Interactive Software Federation of Europe (ISFE), called the Pan European Games
Information (PEGI), with the aim of creating a unified rating system across the majority
of the countries in the European Union. Unlike the ESRB system in the United States, the
PEGI has eight categories with easily understood symbols for parents, children, and
retailers. The ratings of games include age level appropriateness (e.g., 3+, 7+, 16+),
violence, bad language, fear, sex, drugs, discrimination, and gambling (see
http://www.pegi.info/en/index for details). For instance, the violent video game Mortal
Kombat would have ratings for violence, bad language, age, and sex. Importantly, each of
these eight categories has associated symbols which are to be included on the packaing,
to make it easy for parents to determine the content of the video game. For example, if
the game is scary, then there is a picture of a spider on the package, and if the game is
aggressive, then there is a picture of a flexing arm on the package.
In perhaps the most restrictive public policy initiative, Germany has recently
begun to engage in public policy debates to ban violent video games from all children.
The governments of Bavaria and Lower Saxony began to draft a bill which would
sentence video game producers to fines and a maximum of one year in jail for making
video games that emphasize cruel violence on humans or human-looking characters
(Reimer, 2006). This bill was created in response to a school shooting which involved the
killing of students and teachers in Germany. According to N. Anderson (2006), it was
reported that the shooter was a heavy violent video game player, especially of the violent
shooter game Counterstrike. The bill is slated to go to Parliament in 2007 (see Table 2).
From a scientific point of view, if such a bill passed, researchers could then gauge
aggression levels (assessed either in the laboratory or real world) to determine whether
aggression levels (partially stemming from violent video game play) decreased. Of
course, there are many risk factors for aggression other than violent media, so large shifts
in societal aggression are unlikely. Nonetheless, dramatic reductions in media violence
exposure of children should, over a several year period, lead to detectible reductions in
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 11

real world aggression by those children. This would further provide evidence for a strong
media violence link to aggression.
Public Policy Factors
Good public policy is not decided by scientific literature alone. It has been argued
(Anderson & Gentile, 2008) that there are at least four independent but important sources
of information that form public policy: scientific, legal, personal values, and political
realities.
Science refers to the relevant knowledge base created by the scientific
community. This consists of empirical studies using a multitude of research designs, as
well as well-established theory that has been iteratively tested are revised. Science can
influence public policies in two different ways. The first is that well-developed scientific
theory and data can identify the problems that society should be concerned about, which
can lead to much needed attention, and even intervention, for a given topic. For instance,
the science behind media violence and aggression has instigated much debate about
public policy as well as personal decisions for parents, teachers, and consumers of the
mass media. Second, science can identify effective policies by examining the success (or
lack of success) for a given program or policy. For instance, if Germany does ban all
violent video games from children, scientific research can determine whether that policy
proved effective or not.
The second important source of information concerns legal aspects. For example,
in the United States a major legal issue concerning media violence is the United States
Constitutions First Amendment, which imposes rather severe requirements for any
government-imposed restrictions on access and exposure of violent media to be legal.
Although it clearly would infringe on the First Amendment to ban various forms of media
for everybody, there are government restrictions on exposing children to pornography. It
has been suggested that this restriction could be translated into governmental restrictions
for violent media for children (Saunders, 2003a, 2003b), but that has not yet occurred in
the United States.
Political realities constitute the third factor involved in pubic policy formation. To
a great extent, this consists of what is important to voters and to powerful lobbies. In
other words, what can the government do that would be popular for voters? Who has the
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 12

money to influence legislators? Since violent media is readily consumed, it would be


doubtful that the government would get a standing ovation after banning such media from
everybody. Similarly, television, film, music, and video game industries spend large sums
of money lobbying legislators. However, if enough parents, teachers, and organizations
become educated on the effects of media violence, they could be a very powerful voice in
saying what does and does not become public policy.
The final factor associated with public policy concerns the personal values
associated with the individual citizen. Some may consider open access to all media by all
ages more important than lowering aggression and violence rates. Such individuals may
have strong negative feelings toward media violence, but may also have strong positive
feelings toward the freedom of choice.
The Disconnect between the Scientific Community and the Public
As evident from the previous section, there are multiple groups involved in public
policy. The scientific community, legislative leaders, and the general public comprise
three such groups for public policy formation; however, often these groups do not speak
the same language, which leads to misunderstandings. This is not to suggest that the
findings from scientific studies fall wholly on deaf ears of the legal, legislative, and
general public communities; rather, the research is misinterpreted and misunderstood. For
example, over 50% of parents believe that violent media affects their children, but
parents also believe that the mass media has a greater effect on other children than on
their own (Gentile & Walsh, 2002). Further, Gentile (1999) found that 75% of American
parents believe that children who view violent television are more aggressive than
children who do not view violent media, but only 13% of parents impose any rules about
the content their children are allowed to watch on television (Roberts, Foehr, & Rideout,
2005). Overall, this suggests that parents know that media violence is related to
aggression in children, but believe that it is more harmful to other children than their
own.
Thus, one major reason for the disconnect between the scientific evidence and
current public policy is miscommunication between the scientific community and the
relevant non-scientific communities. Parents and policy makers often want to know: Will
playing violent video games (for example) cause my child to hit, kick, or even kill
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 13

another child? However, scientists often are hesitant at making public statements that
have the words cause or prove in them. Doing so is not considered sufficiently
scientifically conservative. Thus, when scientific experts respond to the non-scientists'
questions in their typically scientifically conservative ways (including pointing out other
risk factors), the non-scientists hear a very different message than that intended by the
scientists. Specifically, they hear that "x does not cause y." A related problem is the non-
scientists' misunderstanding of modern scientific conceptions of probabilistic causality.
For example, most people agree that prolonged exposure to cigarette smoking causes
lung cancer, but many individuals who smoke never get lung cancer, and some people
who never smoke do get lung cancer. Thus, smoking is neither a sufficient nor a
necessary cause of lung cancer. Of course, smoking is a cause of lung cancer, but because
there are so many additional risk factors involved it is best understood as a probabilistic
cause. The probabilistic nature delayed the public understanding of the health
consequences of smoking many years; the same difficulty is currently happening in the
media violence domain.
In general, what conditions must be met before the scientific community decides
that a given factor (such as smoking, or playing violent video games) is a probabilistic
cause of some outcome (lung cancer, aggression) Four have been identified (Anderson &
Bushman, 2002). The first is that there needs to be a strong theoretical basis to explain
why media violence is associated with aggression. The second is that the research
findings need fit the theory. Third, the research testing the theory needs to include the use
of multiple research paradigms. Finally, the research needs to have tested and rejected all
plausible alternative explanations.
To date, the research on the effect that violent video games have on aggressive
behavior has met all of the aforementioned criteria. Multiple theoretical frameworks have
been supported by the research showing a link between violent media and aggressive
behavior. These theories include Social Learning Theory (Bandura, 1971), Script Theory
(Huesmann, 1986), Cognitive Neoassociation Theory (Berkowitz, 1993), Excitation
Transfer Theory (Zillman, 1971), and the General Aggression Model, which is an
integration of these prior theories (Anderson & Bushman, 2001; Bushman & Anderson,
2002). One common element between these theories is that they all predict that violent
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 14

media consumption increases the likelihood of behaving aggressively. To meet the


second and third criteria, over 20 years of empirical research studies, using correlational,
experimental, longitudinal, and meta-analytic techniques has consistently yielded a
positive link between media violence exposure and aggressive behavior. Although the
results from one study do not allow researchers to conclude with 100% certainty that
violent video games cause aggression, the accumulation of studies from different
laboratories, using different research designs, and different video games all come to
similar conclusions. Thus, media violence researchers can state with confidence that
media violence does cause aggression (see Anderson et al., 2003).
A second reason why there is such a disconnect between scientists and the public
is because of the mixed messages the public is receiving. Parents, teachers, and mass
media consumers are often barraged with two competing messages concerning media
violence effects. The first message comes from the scientific community who state that
violent media exposure increases the probability of aggressive behavior. The other
message is from the mass media industries, who deny that any valid research shows any
negative effects of violent media. To verify their claim, the mass media industries often
rely on the opinions of experts who are seldom true experts but often are on the
companys payroll. These experts are typically found or even created by the mass
media industry with no rules about who can be classified as an expert. For example, the
quote at the beginning of this chapter may constitute an opinion of a mass media
expert.
When the public are presented with the scientific evidence from real media
experts and the opinions of industry-promoted experts, the public has to decide who is
right or whose opinion to take. Although logically one should side with the expert who
has the strongest record of expertise in a given field, in actuality we know that this
seldom occurs. As outlined by Anderson and Gentile (2008), there are several criteria that
are necessary (but not necessarily sufficient) to evaluate who the experts are:
1. A doctorate in an empirical science
2. Multiple publications in top-ranked, peer-reviewed journal based on original
empirical data gathered to examine media violence effects
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 15

3. Understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of all the major research


designs (i.e., experimental, cross-sectional correlational, longitudinal)
4. Demonstrated willingness and ability to accept and integrate findings from all
major research designs.
Using these criteria, the layperson, whose quote began this chapter, would not be
considered an expert in media violence effects. Indeed, none of the major critics of the
media violence research meet these criteria (Huesmann & Taylor, 2003).
However, it is not just the mass media industry that is preventing the public from
processing and using valid information from the scientific community. The disconnect
between the public and scientific research may also be created by the scientific
community, especially in how they present scientific findings to the public. According to
APS Fellow Alan Leshner, the scientific community needs to communicate with the
public, rather than at the public (Byrd, 2007). In order to accomplish this goal, several
strategies have been offered, which include: telling a personally relevant story; not
flooding people with too much data; using the language of the public rather than
scientific rhetoric; and presenting the data in an understandable fashion. If these goals are
accomplished, then perhaps the public will better understand that violent video games do
have negative consequences, which represents one of the factors that can influence public
policy: personal values.
Conclusion
Why is it that there are no effective public policies in many countries concerning
children and violent media, if the scientific research finds such strong relationships
between media consumption and aggression? This was the question proposed at the
beginning of this chapter. There is strong evidence to suggest a causal link between
media violence exposure and aggressive behavior; however, public policy does not rely
solely on the scientific findings. Other factors must be considered, and other obstacles
overcome. The scientific community is doing its part by continually testing and refining
theory that media violence, including violent video game play, is a causal risk factor for
aggression.
Yet it appears that personal freedom laws, the mass media industry, and the
disconnect between the scientific community and the pubic are impeding the realization
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 16

that the scientific community has envisioned: To decrease childrens exposure to violent
media, which will lead to a more non-aggressive society.

References
Anderson, C. A. (2004). An update on the effects of playing violent video games. Journal
of Adolescence, 27, 113-122.
Anderson, C.A., Anderson, K.B., Dorr, N., DeNeve, K.M., & Flanagan, M. (2000).
Temperature and aggression. Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 32,
63-133. New York: Academic Press.
Anderson, C. A., Berkowitz, L., Donnerstein, E., Huesmann, L. R., Johnson, J., Linz, D.,
Malamuth, N., & Wartella, E. (2003). The influence of media violence on youth.
Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 4, 81-110.
Anderson, C. A., & Bushman, B. J. (2001). Effects of violent video games on aggressive
behavior, aggressive cognition, aggressive affect, physiological arousal, and
prosocial behavior: A meta-analytic review of the scientific literature.
Psychological Science, 12, 353-359.
Anderson, C.A., & Bushman, B.J. (2002). Media violence and the American public
revisited. American Psychologist, 57, 448-450.
Anderson, C. A., & Dill, K. E. (2000). Video games and aggressive thoughts, feelings,
and behavior in the laboratory and in life. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 78, 772-790.
Anderson, C. A., & Gentile, D. A. (2008). Media violence, aggression, and pubic policy.
In E. Borigida & S. Fiske (Eds.), Beyond Common Sense: Psychological Science
in the Courtroom (pp. 281-300). Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Anderson, C. A., Gentile, D. A., & Buckley, K. E. (2007). Violent video game effects on
children and adolescents: Theory, research, and public policy. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Anderson, N. (November, 2006). German politicians call for a ban on violent video
games. Retrieved from http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20061121-8264.html,
on September 14, 2007.
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 17

Aroldi, P. (2003). Television and protection of minors in some European countries: A


comparative study. In U. Carlsson & C. von Feilitzen (Eds.), Promote or Protect?
Perspectives on media literacy and media regulations (pp. 179-196). Goteborg,
Sweden: The UNESCO International Clearinghouse on Children and Violence on
the Screen.
Ballard, M. E., & Lineberger, R. (1999). Video game violence and confederate gender:
Effects on reward and punishment given by college males. Sex Roles, 41, 541-
558.
Ballard, M. E., & Wiest, J. R. (1996). Mortal Kombat : The effects of violent
videogame play on males hostility and cardiovascular responding. Journal of
Applied Social Psychology, 26, 717-730.
Bandura, A. (1971). Social learning of moral judgments. Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, 11, 275-279.
Berkowitz, L. (1993). Aggression: Its causes, consequences, and control. New York:
McGraw-Hill.
Bushman, B. J., & Anderson, C. A. (2002). Violent video games and hostile expectations:
A test of the general aggression model. Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, 28, 1679-1686.
Bushman, B. J., & Cantor, J. R. (2003). Media ratings for violence and sex: Implications
for policymakers and parents. American Psychologist, 58, 130-141.
Byrd, K. K. (2007). Bringing science to society. Observer, 20, 31.
Carnagey, N. L., & Anderson, C. A. (2005). The effects of reward and punishment in
violent video games on aggressive affect, cognition, and behavior. Psychological
Science, 16, 882-889.
Eron, L. D., Gentry, J. H., & Schlegel, P. (1994). Reason to hope: A psychosocial
perspective on violence and youth. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological
Association Press.
Federal Trade Commission (2000). Marketing violent entertainment to children: A
review of self-regulation and industry practices in the motion picture, music
recording, and electronic game industries. Retrieved December 22, 2003 from
http://www.ftc.gov/reports/index.tm#2000
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 18

Gentile, D.A., & Anderson, C.A. (2006). Violent video games: Effects on youth and
public policy implications. Chapter in N. Dowd, D. G. Singer, & R. F. Wilson
(Eds.), Handbook of Children, Culture, and Violence (pp. 225-246). Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage.
Gentile, D. A. (1999). MediaQuotient: National survey of family media habits,
knowledge, and attitudes. Minneapolis, MN: National Institute on Media and the
Family.
Gentile, D. A., Humphrey, J., & Walsh, D. A. (2005). Media ratings for movies, music,
video games, and television: A review of the research and recommendations for
improvements. Adolescent Medicine Clinics, 16, 427-446.
Gentile, D. A., Lynch, P. L., Linder, J. R., & Walsh, D. A. (2004). The effects of violent
video game habits on adolescent hostility, aggressive behaviors, and school
performance. Journal of Adolescence, 27, 5-22.
Gentile, D. A. & Walsh, D. A. (2002). A normative study of family media habits. Journal
of Applied Developmental Psychology, 23, 157-178.
Hammarberg, T. (1998). The child and the media: A report from the UN committee on
the rights of the child. In U. Carlsson & C. von Feilitzen (Eds.), Children and
media violence (pp. 31-34). Goteborg, Sweden: The UNESCO International
Clearinghouse on Chldren adh Violence on the Screen.
Haninger, K., & Thompson, K. M. (2004). Content and ratings of teen-rated video games.
Journal of the American Medical Association, 291, 85665.
Huesmann, L. R. (1986). Psychological processes promoting the relation between
exposure to media violence and aggressive behavior by the viewer. Journal of
Social Issues, 42, 125-139.
Huesmann, L. R., & Taylor, L. D. (2003). The case against the case against media
violence. In D. A. Gentile (Ed.), Media violence and children (pp. 107-130).
Westport, CT: Praeger.
Irwin, A. R., & Gross, A. M. (1995). Cognitive tempo, violent video games, and
aggressive behavior in young boys. Journal of Family Violence, 10, 337-350.
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 19

Ivory, J. D., & Kalyanaraman, S. (2007). The effects of technological advancement and
violent content in video games on players feelings of presence, involvement,
physiological arousal, and aggression. Journal of Communication, 57, 532-555.
Joint Statement (2000). Joint statement on the impact of entertainment violence on
children. Retrieved December 2, 2003, from
http://www.aap.org/advocacy/releases/jsmtevc.htm.
Kirsh, S. J. (2006). Children, adolescents, and media violence. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
Krahe, B., & Moller, I. (2004). Playing violent electronic games, hostile Attributional
style, and aggression-related norms in German adolescents. Journal of
Adolescence, 27, 53-69.
Reimer, J. (December, 2006). German parliament pondering crackdown on violent video
games. Retrieved from http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20061206-8372.html,
on September 14, 2007.
Roberts, D. F., Foehr, U. G., & Rideout, V. (2005). Generation M: Media in the lives of
8- to 18-year-olds. Menlo Park, CA: Kaiser Family Foundation.
Saunders, K. W. (2003a). Regulating youth access to violent video games: Three
responses to First Amendment concerns. 2003 Michigan State Law Review, 51,
51-114.
Saunders, K. W. (2003b). Saving our children from the First Amendment. New York:
New York University Press.
Sherry, J. L. (2001). The effects of violent video games on aggression: A meta-analysis.
Human Communication Research, 27, 409-431.
von Feilitzen, C., & Carlsson, U. (1999). Children and media: Image education
participation. Goteborg, Sweden: The UNESCO International Clearinghouse on
Children and Violence on the Screen.
Walsh, D. A., & Gentile, D. A. (2001). A validity test of movie, television, and video-
game ratings. Pediatrics, 107, 1302-1308.
Zillmann, D. (1971). Excitation transfer in communication-mediated aggressive behavior.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 7, 419-434.
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 20

Table 1.
Major Landmarks in Public Policy Advances Concerning Violent Video Games in the
United States
Year Event
1993 Two United States senators realized that video games were
becoming too violent
1994 Creation of the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) to
implement a rating system on all video games
1996 United States Senate asked National Institute on Media and the
Family to create a Video and Computer Game Report Card to
monitor the quality of the rating system of the ESRB
1999 Columbine High School Shooting
1999 President Bill Clinton asked the Federal Trade Commission to
investigate who was purchasing and renting video games, and what
the content of those games are
1999-2000 Video game industry created the Advertising Review Council to
monitor the advertising, promoting, and packaging of rating system
on video game covers
2000 The United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation had hearing on effects of interactive violence on
children
2001 Gentile and Walsh (2001) conducted a study and found that the
rating systems do not reflect the content in the games well
2001 Anderson and Bushman (2001) and Sherry (2001) published the
first meta-analyses of the effect that violent video games had on
aggression
2001 United States Senate had another hearing to revise the video game
rating system
2005 Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton introduces legislation to prohibit
the sales of sexually explicit and violent video games to children
Violent Video Games and Public Policy 21

Table 1 (continued)
Year Event
2006 Bill introduced to the United States Senate to have the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to conduct a study on how
electronic media affects children, called The Children and Media
Research and Advancement Act (CAMRA)
Christopher P. Barlett and Craig Anderson 22

Table 2.
Major Landmarks in Public Policy Advances Concerning Violent Video Games in the
European Union
Year Event
1984 The Video Recordings Act was created in the United Kingdom,
which punishes those who supply violent or sexually explicit
material to anybody below a certain age limit. The consequences
are up to 5,000 pounds or six months in jail
1989 The United Kingdom created the Entertainment and Leisure
Software Publishers Association (ELSPA) to bring the attention of
video games to the government
1993 The United Kingdom established the first age-based video game
rating system sponsored by the VSC
2003 A new video game rating system is implemented by the ISFE,
called the Pan European Games Information, to provide a unified
European video game rating system
2006 School shooting in Emsdetten, Germany by Sebastian Bosse, who
was reported to be a heavy violent video game player
2006 In response to this school shooting, the governments of Bavaria
and Lower Saxony drafted bill to fine any violent video game
producers to at most a one year jail sentence
2007 European Union justice ministers from Germany, UK, Greece,
Finland, Spain, and France met to discuss preliminary methods to
have a unified European policy to ban the access of violent video
games to children

You might also like