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American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 51, No. 8, 1231-1259 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0002764207312020
© 2008 SAGE Publications

Watching Social Science

The Debate About the Effects of Exposure to Televised Violence on Aggressive Behavior

Bruce Glymour

Kansas State University, Manhattan

Clark Glymour

Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA

Maria Glymour

Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA and Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University, NY

The evidence that exposure to media violence causes later aggression derives largely from observational (nonexperimental) studies augmented by short-term experimental studies. The authors review some of the difficulties in causal inference from observational, longitudinal data; examine the extent to which these seem relevant to the empirical work on exposure to televised violence published to date; and present a reanalysis of data from an especially influential study to address one of the more serious limitations of existing analyses. They conclude that the data give evidence that there is likely, although not certainly, a causal connection between exposure to televised violence and adult aggression. The authors close with a brief discussion of policy interventions designed to reduce exposure to violent TV.

Key Words: causal inference • epidemiologic methods • causal graphical modeling • automated search • televised violence • aggression


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J. A. Anderson
The Production of Media Violence and Aggression Research: A Cultural Analysis
American Behavioral Scientist, April 1, 2008; 51(8): 1260 - 1279.
[Abstract] [PDF]