Twenty-five years of research on violence in digital games and aggression: Empirical evidence, perspectives, and a debate gone astray

Elson,Malte M.,Ferguson,Christopher John C.J.,

Research article (journal)

Abstract

Violence in digital games has been a source of controversy in the scientific community and general public. Over two decades of research have examined this issue. However, much of this research has been undercut by methodological limitations and ideological statements that go beyond what scientific evidence could support. We review 25 years of experimental, cross-sectional, longitudinal, and metaanalytical research in this field. Empirical evidence regarding the impact of violent digital games on player aggression is, at best, mixed and cannot support unambiguous claims that such games are harmful or represent a public health crisis. Rather, indulgence in such claims risked damage to the credibility of games effects research, credibility which can only be restored through better empirical research and more conservative and careful statements by scholars. We encourage the field to engage in a responsible dialog and constructive debate that could continue to be enriching and invigorating. © 2013 Hogrefe Publishing.

Details zur Publikation

Release year: 2014
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish