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The Effects of Extremely Violent Comic Books on Social Information Processing
Author(s) -
Steven J. Kirsh,
Paul V. Olczak
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
journal of interpersonal violence
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1552-6518
pISSN - 0886-2605
DOI - 10.1177/088626002237400
Subject(s) - comics , hostility , aggression , psychology , reading (process) , interpretation (philosophy) , trait , social psychology , developmental psychology , literature , linguistics , art , philosophy , computer science , programming language
This study investigated the effects of reading extremely violent comic books (EVCB) versus non- violent comic books (NVCB) on the interpretation of overt and relational ambiguous provoca- tion situations. Two hundred forty-nine introductory psychology students read either EVCB or NVCB. After reading the comic books, participants read hypothetical stories in which overt or relational aggression occurred but the intent of the provocateur was ambiguous. After each story, participants were asked a series of questions about the provocateur's intent, potential retaliation toward the provocateur, and the provocateur's emotional state. Trait hostility was significantly related to hostile responding. Regardless of the type of aggression, participants reading EVCB responded more negatively than participants reading NVCB did. Males responded more negatively to the overt scenarios, whereas females responded more negatively to the relational scenarios. Results indicate that interpretation of ambiguous material appears to be affected by a number of variables, including gender, trait hostility, and violent media.

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