Study of 11,000 Children Shows No Correlation Between Video Games and Bad Behavior
Or television, either
Any time a high-profile act of violence happens, some media pundits are quick to blame video games for influencing the perpetrators' actions. But results of a UK study says that such a link may not exist.
Recent research from the University of Glasgow —aiming to chart just how consumption of video games and television changes the behaviors of young children—has found that a steady diet of video games doesn't result in significantly altered behavior. The University of Glasgow paper pulled data from Great Britain's massive, ten-year Millennium Cohort Study and looked at how "conduct problems, emotional symptoms, peer relationship problems, hyperactivity/inattention and prosocial behaviour" were changed with regard to how much television or video games a child engaged with.
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Also: Incandescent light exposure shows no correlation to tanning.
It most certainly does alter behavior. Aversion to sunlight, lack of social interaction (online "friends" are not the real thing"), and being repulsive to girls (not showering and peeing in bottles does that).