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Violence in Children's Television Programming: Assessing the Risks
Authors:Barbara J. Wilson  Stacy L. Smith  W. James Potter  Dale Kunkel  Daniel Linz  Carolyn M. Colvin  Edward Donnerstein
Affiliation:University of Wisconsin-Madison is a professor in the Department of Speech Communication at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.;University of California, Santa Barbara) is an assistant professor in the Department of Communication at Michigan State University.;Indiana University.;University of Southern California.;University of Wisconsin-Madison.;Florida State University are all professors in the Department of Communication at the University of California, Santa Barbara.;MA, University of California, Santa Barbara now resides in Kent, Washington.
Abstract:This study investigates the nature and extent of violence contained in television programming that targets children aged 12 and younger. The measures employed in this content analysis are grounded in previous experimental research that bas identified contextual features that either diminish or enhance the risk of harmful effects associated with viewing violent portrayals. This report uses the database from the National Television Violence Study (Wilson et al., 1998), which involved an unusually large and representative sample of programming. Results indicate that programs targeted to children contain more violence than do other types of programming, the violence itself is just as likely to be glamorized in children's as in nonchildren's shows, but it is even more sanitized and more likely to be trivialized. These patterns heighten the risk of viewers learning aggression and becoming desensitized from such portrayals. Finally, this study documents 5 subgenres of children's programming that differ dramatically in violent content.
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