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| You're going to let this guy in a courtroom? |
Digging deeper into the article, something else disturbing reveals itself. The anti-video game crowd attempts to bolster their claims with statistics. Of course, I found no mention of the specific studies in the article. However, the online version (the one I linked to earlier, I read the print version) contained a link to one such study. If you read the first two paragraphs and set it down, you may agree with Senator Yee. However, if you read the entire article, it's likely that you won't be convinced. Here's the first two brief paragraphs in their entirety:
A new review of 130 studies "strongly suggests" playing violent video games increases aggressive thoughts and behavior and decreases empathy.
The results hold "regardless of research design, gender, age or culture," says lead researcher Craig Anderson, who directs the Center for the Study of Violence at Iowa State University in Ames. (link here)Sounds compelling, yes? Well continue reading the article and you get this:
But Christopher Ferguson, an associate professor at Texas A&M International University in Laredo, says in a critique accompanying the study that the effects found "are generally very low." He adds that the analysis "contains numerous flaws," which he says result in "overestimating the influence" of violent games on aggression.
Ferguson says his own study of 603 predominantly Hispanic young people, published last year in The Journal of Pediatrics, found "delinquent peer influences, antisocial personality traits, depression, and parents/guardians who use psychological abuse" were consistent risk factors for youth violence and aggression. But he also found that neighborhood quality, parents' domestic violence and exposure to violent TV or video games "were not predictive of youth violence and aggression."That's the best they got? Flawed methodology? Weak correlations that may not ever exist? That is all these anti-video game violence movement has always had. They've always been flying in the face of science and reason. Ever since Mortal Kombat... the game that, supposedly, stole away the innocence of so many victimized children. Now, the study did contain a cultural bias, note the words "predominately Hispanic". I'm not convinced that it in any way affected its integrity
And even the statistics that "strongly" support video game violence leading to aggression turn out to be... well... not so strong after all:
Anderson says his team "never said it's a huge effect. But if you look at known risk factors for the development of aggression and violence, some are bigger than media violence and some are smaller...Smaller than say "delinquent peer influences, antisocial personality traits, depression, and parents/guardians who use psychological abuse" as noted by Ferguson earlier in the article? Yeah.
"...If you have a child with no other risk factors for aggression and violence and if you allow them to suddenly start playing video games five hours to 10 hours a week, they're not going to become a school shooter. One risk factor doesn't do it by itself."The proponents of the anti-video game campaign would like you to think otherwise. Ironically, their own statistics work against them.
But he notes that video game violence is "the only causal risk factor that is relatively easy for parents to do something about."
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| These guys get to decide. |
The use of misleading words like "strongly suggests" in the Anderson study gives people like Yee the ammo they need to win rhetorical bouts. However, the strong suggestion that Anderson makes is akin to seeing someone soaked from head to toe "strongly suggests" that they jumped in a lake.
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| Mega Man: Mass Murderer |
What is the real problem here? Perhaps it the variety of risk factors that Ferguson mentioned. He certainly has evidence on his side. Whatever the problem may be, it certainly isn't violent video games. It wasn't in 1994 when the ESRB was founded and it's not in 2010. We cannot allow our state governments to arbitrarily decide what is acceptable and what is not when it comes to a First Amendment issue.
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Image of parents and child from Daily Mail online (link here)
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