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News Article2019EN

Violent video games found not to be associated with adolescent aggression

Şiddet içeren video oyunlarının ergen saldırganlığıyla ilişkili olmadığı bulundu

Details

Authors
Andrew K. Przybylski & Netta Weinstein
Institution / Publisher
University of Oxford
Date
2019-02-13
Type
News Article

Summary

Oxford Internet Institute researcher Andrew Przybylski and co-author Netta Weinstein report that recent violent video game play is not a meaningful predictor of aggressive behaviour in British 14- and 15-year-olds. The piece summarises a preregistered study of 1,004 adolescents and their caregivers that combined objectively coded game violence (using official PEGI and ESRB ratings) with carer-reported aggression, and found no statistically significant link between the two. The article highlights the team’s use of Open Science methods — preregistration and transparent analysis pipelines — designed to reduce researcher bias in a long-contested literature, and notes that the underlying paper is published open-access in Royal Society Open Science.

  • Violence & Aggression
  • Children & Adolescents
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Citation

Download BibTeX
Andrew K. Przybylski & Netta Weinstein (2019). Violent video games found not to be associated with adolescent aggression. University of Oxford. https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2019-02-13-violent-video-games-found-not-be-associated-adolescent-aggression

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