More than 200 academics have signed an open letter criticizing a controversial new statement [PDF] by the American Psychological Association suggesting a link between violent video games and increased aggression.
The APA writes:
It is the accumulation of risk factors that tends to lead to aggressive or violent behaviour. The research reviewed here demonstrates that violent video game use is one such risk factor.
A positive association between violent video game use and increased aggressive behavior was found in most (12 of 14 studies) but not all studies published after the earlier meta‐analyses. This continues to be a reliable finding and shows good multi‐method consistency across various representations of both violent video game exposure and aggressive behavior.
However, the group of academics said they felt the methodology of the research was deeply flawed as a significant part of material included in the study had not been subjected to peer review. "I fully acknowledge that exposure to repeated violence may have short-term effects - you would be a fool to deny that - but the long-term consequences of crime and actual violent behaviour, there is just no evidence linking violent video games with that," said one.
"If you play three hours of Call of Duty you might feel a little bit pumped, but you are not going to go out and mug someone."
(Score: 2) by Farkus888 on Tuesday August 18 2015, @04:56AM
It seems that any video game with bad controls causes aggression. One of the early papers claiming violent games cause violence messed up controlling for this effect. The non violent game was a simple point and click interface, the violent game was a full 3d mouse and keyboard shooter. All of the subjects were non gamers to keep their past playing from confusing the results.
(Score: 2) by LoRdTAW on Tuesday August 18 2015, @12:08PM
Proof @2:40 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TsQFYceNZS8 [youtube.com]