Do Video Games Hone Players' Killer Instincts? Not So Much
Last year California passed legislation banning the sale of "offensively violent" video games to minors. As my colleague Jacob Sullum pointed out in his column, The Terminator vs. the Constitution, the new law does considerable violence to the First Amendment. Amusingly, Sullum cites the State of California filing that defends the new law while simultaneously claiming that the state
…cannot reasonably be expected to supply "empirical proof of how expressive material impacts such nebulous concepts as one's ethics or morals."
As Sullum notes California
…could avoid this problem if it stopped using such nebulous concepts to justify censorship.
So in what direction does "empirical proof" point when it comes to the impact of video games on the morals of players? There's lots to consider. A new study in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking by researchers in Singapore looked at the effect of playing three weeks of Grand Theft Auto IV on kids. As the researchers note:
Although >100 studies have been conducted to examine the impact of violent video games on aggression, no clear consensus has been reached, particularly in terms of their long-term impact on violent behavior and aggressive cognitions.
Indeed. So what did they find when Singaporean kids took on the role of fresh Liberty City immigrant Niko Bellic fighting his way through a criminal underworld filled with assorted shysters, thieves and sociopaths? The study's abstract reports:
One hundred thirty-five participants were assigned either to the treatment condition where they played a violent video game in a controlled laboratory setting for a total of 12 hours or to the control group where they did not play a game. Participants in the treatment group played Grand Theft Auto IV over a period of 3 weeks and were compared with a control group on the posttest measures of trait aggression, attitudes toward violence, and empathy. The findings do not support the assertion that playing a violent video game for a period of 3 weeks increases aggression or reduces empathy, but they suggest a small increase in proviolence attitudes.
But remember that there are studies that find that violent video games do promote violence in real life. For example, a new study [link to downloadable file] published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology had some participants play a violent video game and others a non-violent game. Afterwards, the players were told that they were participating in a reaction time test with an [fictitious] opponent. To test reaction times, the players would blast the opponent with a loud noise whose level and duration they could pick. The abstract reports:
Participants low in previous exposure to video game violence who played a violent (relative to a nonviolent) game showed a reduction in the P3 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP) to violent images (indicating physiological desensitization), and this brain response mediated the effect of video game content on subsequent aggressive behavior.
In other words, violent game players were initially more likely to blast reaction time opponents with louder noises. It turns out though that eventually tit-for-tat takes over and reaction time participants start to modulate their responses to the levels of noise that the opponent is blasting them with.
Another study in the journal Psychological Science by two European researchers bluntly declares in their abstract that they found:
Past research has provided abundant evidence that playing violent video games increases aggressive behavior. So far, these effects have been explained mainly as the result of priming existing knowledge structures. The research reported here examined the role of denying humanness to other people in accounting for the effect that playing a violent video game has on aggressive behavior. In two experiments, we found that playing violent video games increased dehumanization, which in turn evoked aggressive behavior. Thus, it appears that video-game-induced aggressive behavior is triggered when victimizers perceive the victim to be less human.
Really? Interestingly, yet another study in the journal Contemporary Economic Policy suggests that playing violent video games may have another beneficial effect on the propensity toward real world violence:
Psychological studies find that video game play is associated with markers for violent and antisocial attitudes. It is plausible that these markers indicate either whetted or sated preferences for antisocial behavior. I investigate whether a proxy for video gaming is associated with the prevalence of various crimes and find evidence that gaming is associated with significant declines in crime and death rates. These results are robust to various alternative specifications. Other youth-related leisure activities - sports and movie viewing - generate smaller or no effects. These results cast doubt on the desirability of proposed restrictions on video game marketing.
Whetted or sated? I am going with sated. As I pointed out in my column, Video Violence = Real Violence?, more than five years ago, the rise of video gaming has more or less coincided with plummeting crime rates. Video game sales have quadrupled since 1996 while violent crime rates have fallen by nearly 60 percent. Yes, I know it's just a correlation, but it's a pretty damned suggestive correlation. So perhaps California's busybody legislators ought to ponder the effect that censoring violent video games might have on the state's crime statistics.
I end by noting that the reported rape rate has fallen by 86 percent since 1991. Consideration of the possible effect of the proliferation of internet porn on rape statistics will have to wait for another time.
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The study on porn and the correlation with rape is: http://www.bakadesuyo.com/is-t.....ccessibili
So, what games is Reason playing at the moment?
Me, It's Europa Universalis 3 and Tales of Vesperia, although I may start Batman: Arkham Asylum soon, as my roommate just finished his game.
I'm revisiting Borderlands. I still haven't killed Crawmerax yet, and I want to.
I gave up on Crawmerax. He's just too damned difficult to kill solo. And I never did come across any pearlescent weapons.
I'm almost level 61; I think I'll be able to kill him in Playthrough 1 at least. We'll see. He's fucking tough.
I may reload with a Brick or Roland build and see how they fare with him. I currently have a 61st level corrosion-based Gunslinger/Assassin Mordecai, and he barely scratches Crawmerax.
My Siren can Phasewalk away from him, and there are tutorials on techniques. I will also restructure my skill tree once I'm ready to give me the fastest Phasewalk regeneration and maximum damage infliction. Right now I'm heavy into Phoenix (light people on fire just by walking near them) and elemental damage. Plus I finally have a Typhoon submachinegun so I can shoot off walls and hit him in the back.
I've found Roland the easiest to solo with, and Brick the 2nd easiest. They both have great specials, too.
Solo'd him with a hunter at level 50 by hiding in a corner with a revolver that regenerated ammo. Took about 45 minutes of monotonous shooting to finally get him.
He dropped garbage. Fuck that oversized crayfish and fuck Gearbox for making it so difficult to get fat loot.
Medal of Honor and Homefront
Torchlight for mindless dungeon crawling and trying to knock out the Fallout 3 expansion packs.
I'm way behind everybody else, I know. I don't get much game time in, so I take longer.
I just got a hand-me-down Xbox360.
Workin' on Dragon Age and New Vegas. Both are fantastic.
Just finished BioShock which was fucking great.
Do yourself a favor and skip Dragon Age 2.
Still playing BlackOps multiplayer; beat Bulletstorm so I'm putting that away for a while (but will revisit again in a month or two), and just started a new FO:NV playthrough. Brink comes out in a few weeks and I'm looking forward to that.
Game-wise I'm looking forward to this fall when Battlefield 3, Elder Scrolls: Skyrim, and Guild Wars 2 all come out.
Diablo III, bitches! And eventually Duke Nukem.
Skyrim is going to be deadly. 'Tis a good thing I lack any form of significant other to distract me.
That and I just ordered a new gaming rig with a quad core and a 2gb nvidia card. Just being able to get my hands on mods makes this a PC choice over console (forget that my PC will have hardware the console can't get near).
Battlefield 3 on PC will also be insane. 32 vs 32 with a full spectrum of military vehicles. Hells yes!!!
Multiple cores don't really help you with games. You're better off getting the fastest processor you can, plus the most retarded video card you feel like paying for.
I went with a 2GB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti.
I know the multi-cores are only as useful as the software allows them to be. Oblivion was developed with dual cores in mind, and you can alter the config file to take advantage of this. I expect Skyrim to be the same way.
I admit that I'm a computer noob though.
That seems to be a pretty good card. I still play on my (jacked) laptop, but I am considering buying a retarded desktop to attach to my 50" plasma and go full retard on games. Though I'm not sure if I like playing on the plasma or not.
Does the plasma have only 1080 vertical resolution or can it go higher with a higher source?
Oh yeah, I'm gonna lose sleep over Guild Wars 2. We should make a Reason guild.
Haha, I've still got my Vent server up and 25 points towards the GW2 rewards. I'll have about 6 months to grind out the last 5 points I need to start with all the bonus goodies.
Love the black ops multiplayer (or B'ops as true insiders call it) finished red dead undead nightmare (took a break b/c didn't want the game to end) Last year loved Far Cry 2 - spent sooooo much time driving around Africa in a jeep liberty with a .50 cal sniper
Nothing, really. Waiting for Diablo 3, I guess.
Is Civ 5 worth it?
Yes.
Just discovered Demon's Souls for PS3.
Once that's done, Dragon Age (from the ridiculous christmas Steam sales).
Demon's Souls is one of the few standout PS3 games I've played. Great melding of action-adventure and RPG elements. The risk-reward elements of the melee system is really refreshing.
I haven't played in months. Are people still leaving messages in the game world?
Yes. Multiplayer is inconsistent though. On a Sunday night I will likely find 5-6 games to join in an hour. I'm lucky to get even a single one the entire rest of the week though. I've only been playing for ~3 weeks.
I sooo want them to make this for PC. It seems a perfect medium for it, with the networked games and all.
I quit playing video games because I decided I was tired of crap computers that broke down quickly and had obsolete hardware for gaming within a year or so after purchase, and got 4 Macs instead.
^This.
I do sometimes miss my gaming rig, but maintenance and upgrades were just too much hassle.
I'm actually not ashamed to admit that I'm replaying Super Mario Wii.
I'm convinced my family needs some kind of therapy every time we try to ride the bone 'coaster together.
There is so much wrong with that sentence I don't know where to begin.
You know after I saw it I thought, "That looks filthy." Multiplay that level, SF, and you'll understand. If you can pull yourself away from Pokemon Black. (diving under desk, cackling evilly)
"Gotta catch 'em all!"
-Sorority chant at STD Awareness Fair
Why would you be ashamed, it's awesome in its simplicity, a refreshing break from the more advanced and complicated games on the PS3 and Xbox.
I gave up on video games after they stopped making Super Nintendo. I like my games simple and non-realistic.
Just finished Bulletstorm, and 2nd playthrough of Arkham Asylum. Going back to finish NCR playthrough on New Vegas.
*clearing throat* Well, the only time I have a free moment to play anymore is while waiting to pick my kids up after school, so. . . I'm playing Okamiden.
Okami is a great game though, I actually bought it for Wii after I got the PS3 so I could still play it (damn slim and its lack of PS2 support).
Agreed. The DS is a fantastic medium for it, too; "painting" with the stylus is much less frustrating than praying the Wii motion sensor will actually register your basic slash *cursing softly*
Taking a break from Dragon Age: Origins to play the Witcher again before the sequel comes out.
No Crysis 2?
Go and Scrabble.
Yeah, I'm a nerd.
I still play go and backgammon all the time. I love board games as much as I love video games.
I went back to Neverwinter Nights, the first one, which I never beat. I have a few dozen old titles I'm trying to complete before buying too many more new games. There's a site I'm hoping to get an account with called The Backloggery, which allows you to track progress in all your games. Registration is currently closed, sadly, but it looks pretty awesome.
World of Warcraft.
Minecraft
"If looks could kill, they probably will"
Since playing Dragon Age my propensity to kill real-life dragons has gone up 1000%.
I also give a tonne of gifts to people I want to sleep with.
Thus proving you're male, as if your presence here and commentary in a video game thread wasn't enough proof.
"Offensively violent" to whom?
Good point. Nothing can be inherently offensive. It has to offend someone first. Any law based on something's offensiveness is bound to be unreasonably vague.
Only in California. We're going to create legislation that bans something even though we don't and can't prove it has any harmful effects. We just know.
Well, you have struch a nerve. The judiciary long ago, without citation to the text of the constitution itself or to founding era support, ordained that any legislation passed by congress or a state legislature, is constitutionally presumed to be valid and that those who would undo the law would now bear a heavy burden in trying to scuttle it.
Over the years the courts have held that the state need not demonstrate actual facts which would justify the legislation.
Ain't monopoly a great thing?
That was United States v. Carolene Products , 304 U.S. 144 (1938)
It does make sense though. In criminal trials, the defendant is not required to demonstrate actual facts that prove innocence. So long as fundamental rights, protected liberty interests, or suspect classifications are not at stake, why should not laws be afforded that same presumption of constitutionality?
Only in California? I would agree, but I can't sip a legit Four Loko while smoking weed and the reason isn't because of CA law...
Killer surgeons? 😉
Killer surgeons
Killer surgeons
not sure that conclusions fm a study in singapore apply to america which is a much, much more violent society
So you're saying that the psyche of kids in Singapore is significantly different from kids in America?
Singapore has low crime rates because of heavy law enforcement.
And caning.
that and the police give you the choice of eating your dog after they shoot it
More to the point: are you seriously suggesting that kids who voluntarily buy and play violent video games in a First World industrialized city like Singapore have massive cognitive differences in how their minds process simulated violence, compared to other First World industrialized cities?
I'm going to guess that, despite cultural differences, those kids are more alike than you seem to think.
i dont agree. singapore is substantially different w diff norms & mores. spent time there personally on duty & out & about on leave.
people are people are people.
Remember when Mortal Combat 3 was the shockingly violent new game that had everyone's panties in a bunch?
well it did have babality, and friendship moves.
Crap, I remember when Pacman was considered violent.
Yeah. Remember when Bart Simpson was going to corrupt our youth?
Those were the good old days. When "Eat my shorts" made the establishment tremble.
He did.
I play Farmville. *ducks*
You guys seem to forget that the law in question here forbids the sale of certain games to minors, not to adults.
That is an important distinction.
Important distinction, or meaningless distinction?
Should minors have access to hardcore porn or Mein Kampf?
What age are your 'minors', Michael?
Why does that matter?
Well, I believe people of any age can purchase porn or books.
They already do, idiot. And of course they should.
Um, what's stopping them? I can buy Mein Kampf on Amazon and look up porn on Google (although I've only done one and I'm 19).
Mein Kampf? What a bizarre example. The content of that book isn't exactly blood, guts, and swearing. I suppose the idea that Hitler wrote an autobiography is too upsetting to expose kids to?
I think it is an important distinction. The human mind is still in its developmental stages until around the age of 18 so it is worth taking that into consideration.
Wow that makes sense. The brain is still developing, so looking at porn or racism is bad. It's science!
I thought playing games would make me good at using actual firearms, or driving. Not so.
Video Violence = Real Violence = Witchcraft.
What's with the ">100 studies..."? Is it really that hard to write "over" or "more than"?
ssss
I'm unsurprised that Schwarzenegger would sign something into law designed to hamstring video game consumers with vague and stupidly interpretive laws.
Given that Hollywood has been getting their ass kicked by the video game industry for the better part of a decade now, it's unsurprising that a governor who is a big shot in the movie industry would have no problem with a law like this.
It's protectionism, pure and simple.
Also, Fallout 3 is freaking amazing.
Great article.
I do have a note of correction for your opening paragraph. California passed the law in 2005 and it has been in litigation since then. The US Supreme Court held a hearing on it this past year which a decision is expected sometime this year.
I'm looking forward to LA Noire. We all know who to blame if I become a private eye walking the streets of LA wearing a fedora and narrating to myself.
Fucking R*, turning us all into fictional psychos.
Except the kid in Bully, he ends up alright.
Governments have absolutely no authority (technical, moral, or practical) to regulate the sale and distribution of video games, as with pretty much everything else.
That Michael guy a few comments up is from Long Beach, for fuck's sake. It's safe to assume he's a typical California liberal.
maybe in the confederate constitution. but the US constitution has the commerce clause so ur opinion isnt factual
The Constitution of the Confederate States of America is practically a copy of the United States Constitution, with a modest assortment of minor alterations pertaining to the regulation of waterways and slavery. What the fuck are you talking about?
The Commerce Clause permits the federal government of the Republic to regulate solely the dealings of state governments with other state governments, presumably, and by all logical constructions, to prevent divisions and economic conflict between the various states of the confederation.
You'd make a pretty awesome judge in FDR's era - he'd pick you in a second.
And for anybody else with similar illusions, make no mistake, and remember perpetually - the United States of America, as it was founded, was a CONFEDERACY. This is American federalism. I encountered a few clowns yesterday that believed the federal government had the authority to abolish STATES and impose martial law arbitrarily.
Reminds me of The President's Analyst, wherein the title character wishes all his patients could satisfy their urges by actually killing people.