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Eron, Leonard D.; Huesmann, L. Rowell – School Psychology Review, 1987
This article reviews the research findings which have established relations between television viewing and the subsequent attitudes and behaviors of viewers, emphasizing the influence of televised violence. It identifies the implications and remedies for public policy, for society, and for the parents and educators responsible for children's daily…
Descriptors: Aggression, Behavior Problems, Child Abuse, Child Development
Huesmann, L. Rowell; Bachrach, Riva S. – 1985
Children's social and cultural environments may affect their perceptions of the reality of television violence. One of the problems in measuring the importance of societal variables is the difficulty in finding children whose social environments have differed for most of their lives in well prescribed ways. An exception to this are kibbutz- and…
Descriptors: Aggression, Foreign Countries, Primary Education, Programing (Broadcast)
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Eron, Leonard D.; Huesmann, L. Rowell – 1980
Longitudinal and intervention laboratory studies were conducted to investigate the effects of viewing televised violence on the aggressive behavior of elementary school children. In the longitudinal study 505 children were studied over a 3-year period. The measures used included peer nominated aggression, aggression anxiety and popularity,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aggression, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
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Huesmann, L. Rowell – Journal of Social Issues, 1986
Argues that the effect of media violence on individual differences in aggression is primarily the result of a cumulative learning process during childhood. Presents a developmental theory holding that a child's repeated viewing of media violence, in combination with other factors, can culminate in aggressive behavior patterns (including…
Descriptors: Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, Attribution Theory, Child Development
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Huesmann, L. Rowell; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1984
A longitudinal, cross-cultural field study was made to determine boundary conditions under which the television violence/aggression relation obtains, to determine intervening variables, and to illuminate the process through which television violence relates to aggression. Children from first through fifth grades in the United States, Australia,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aggression, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Influences
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Huesmann, L. Rowell; Moise-Titus, Jessica; Podolski, Cheryl-Lynn; Eron, Leonard D. – Developmental Psychology, 2003
Examined relations between TV-violence viewing at ages 6 to 10 and adult aggression about 15 years later for sample growing up in the 1970s and 1980s. Found that childhood exposure to media violence predicted young adult aggression for males and females. Identification with aggressive TV characters and perceived realism of TV violence predicted…
Descriptors: Aggression, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Developmental Stages
Huesmann, L. Rowell; Bachrach, Riva S. – 1986
This paper reports the results of a comparative study carried out with populations from two distinct cultural environments: kibbutz and city raised children in Israel. The study examined how perceptions and responses to television differ across social environments and how children's perceptions of, and reactions to, television may affect…
Descriptors: Aggression, Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis, Cultural Context