Drummond, Aaron, and James D. Sauer. 2019. “Divergent Meta-analyses Do
Not Present Uniform Evidence That Violent Video Game Content Increases
Aggressive Behaviour.” PsyArXiv. September 13. doi:10.31234/osf.io/xms5u
Abstract:
Whether violent games increase aggression is a contentious issue. The
relatively enduring disagreement in the literature about whether violent
video games cause increased aggression is reflected in divergent
meta-analyses. Though we applaud Mathur and VanderWeele (2019) for
attempting to synthesise such divergent meta-analyses to determine an
overarching view on the effects of violent media, we argue that their
interpretation of the evidence is misguided. Underpinning the notion
that the evidence, in general, favours a “violent game effect” lie two
problematic assumptions: (a) that the analyses conducted within these
meta-analyses are equally methodologically and statistically rigorous
and therefore equally valid, and (b) that even tiny effects are
veridical. Here, we show that the effects reported by Anderson et al.
(2010) appear to overstate the evidence in favour of a relationship
between violent game content and aggression, and that bias-corrected
models produce only tiny effects (Hilgard et al., 2017). We then compare
these smaller effects estimated by Hilgard et al. (2017) and Ferguson
(2015) to show that they appear to be in close agreement. Finally, as a
reminder that non-zero meta-analytic effect sizes do not guarantee that
an effect is meaningful, we compare these effect sizes to the sizes of
(significant) yet nonsense effects of Extra Sensory Perception to show
that the effects of violent game content on aggression are so small that
we should dismiss them as practically meaningless.
Check also Aggressive Video Games are Not a Risk Factor for Future Aggression in Youth: A Longitudinal Study. Christopher J. Ferguson1●C. K. John Wang. Journal of Youth and Adolescence. Accepted June 20 2019. https://www.bipartisanalliance.com/2019/07/aggressive-video-games-are-not-risk.html
No comments:
Post a Comment