"It's just a game...."

WaPo:

Children and teenagers who play violent video games show increased physical aggression months afterward, according to new research that adds another layer of evidence to the continuing debate over the video-game habits of the youngest generation.

The research, published today in the journal Pediatrics, brings together three longitudinal studies, one from the United States and two from Japan, examining the content of games, how often they are played and aggressive behaviors later in a school year.

The U.S. research was the first in the nation to look at the effects of violent video games over time, said lead author Craig A. Anderson, a psychology professor at Iowa State University and director of its Center for the Study of Violence.

Anderson said the collaboration with Japanese researchers was particularly telling because video games are popular there and crime and aggression are less prevalent. Some gamers have cited Japan's example as evidence that violent games are not harmful.

Yet the studies produced similar findings in both countries, Anderson said. "When you find consistent effects across two very different cultures, you're looking at a pretty powerful phenomenon," he said. "One can no longer claim this is somehow a uniquely American phenomenon. This is a general phenomenon that occurs across cultures."

The study in the United States showed an increased likelihood of getting into a fight at school or being identified by a teacher or peer as being physically aggressive five to six months later in the same school year. It focused on 364 children ages 9 to 12 in Minnesota and was first included in a 2007 book, "Violent Video Game Effects on Children and Adolescents."

And in a second Pediatrics study, also released today:

Teenagers who watch a lot of television featuring flirting, necking, discussion of sex and sex scenes are much more likely than their peers to get pregnant or get a partner pregnant, according to the first study to directly link steamy programming to teen pregnancy.

The study, which tracked more than 700 12-to-17-year-olds for three years, found that those who viewed the most sexual content on TV were about twice as likely to be involved in a pregnancy as those who saw the least.

"Watching this kind of sexual content on television is a powerful factor in increasing the likelihood of a teen pregnancy," said lead researcher Anita Chandra. "We found a strong association." The study is being published today in Pediatrics, the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Sounds like the computer and the teebee aren't ideal babysitters. Except for the corporations who peddle this stuff, of course.

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Sorry still don't buy it

This is more a reflection on parenting, than the video games or tv shows. These kids could play Little Bunny Foo Foo and watch Dora the Explorer, and would still behave inappropriately.

i can haz hillary nao?

He who will not reason is a bigot; he who cannot is a fool; and he who dares not is a slave.
- Sir William Drummond

yup--they blame everything that comes along

as bad influences affecting kids--from comicbooks to tv to rock and roll to heavy metal to goth to video games to text messaging to ...

The one relevant underlying thing common to both countries, i'd say, is that kids spend more and more time alone with various media--and not playing with other kids.

we see it here in health and obesity rates and also see it in things like scheduled "playdates" and other activities as opposed to free time and free play, and even in the rise of enclosed "gated communities" and increased segregation of housing and school districts. (Japan has had enormous socialization problems at all levels for ages now--including vicious bullying too--and an emphasis on privacy -- and conformity -- that doesn't allow enough freedom/outlets for kids at all, i think)

No sh*t Sherlock

*cough* Army recruiting tool *cough*