Abstract
The purpose of this article is to investigate whether competition hypothesis (Anderson and Carnagey, 2009) contributes to the General Aggression Model when video game genre is entered into the relationship between video game use and self-reported physical aggression. A pre-test (n=93) taken randomly from the research sample employed categorized the game genres as violent and/or competitive. 1,170 adolescents (ages 12–18) completed the written survey. Online shooter games and fight’em up games, categorized as both violent and competitive, were positively related to self-reported physical aggression, while simulation games manifested a negative relationship. Video game genres such as strategy, sports, offline shooter, racing, adventure, puzzle, and platform games were not significantly related to physical aggression. The results support the hypothesis that the presence of both competition and violence in games increases the probability of physical aggression. This study shows that (1) video game genres can be used to predict physical aggression in a non-causal way and (2) that there is support for an interaction effect of the competition hypothesis and the violence hypothesis.
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Articles in the same Issue
- Titelseiten
- Editorial
- Editorial 2019
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- Lying press: Three levels of perceived media bias and their relationship with political preferences
- Still marginalized: Gender inequalities in the largest Polish daily’s sports coverage
- Media frames and public perceptions of global poverty in the UK: Is there a link?
- Emotional woman – rational man? Gender stereotypical emotional expressivity of German politicians in news broadcasts
- Genres matter: Video games as predictors of physical aggression among adolescents
- Book Reviews
- Frandsen, F., & Johansen, W. (2017). Organizational crisis communication: A multivocal approach. London: Sage. 280 pp.
- Zienkowski, J. (2017). Articulations of self and politics in activist discourse: A discourse analysis of critical subjectivities in minority debates. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan/Springer Nature. xix + 451pp.
- Carlsson, U., & Pöyhtäri, R. (Eds.) (2017). The assault on journalism. Building knowledge to protect freedom of expression. Göteborg: Nordicom. 378 pp.
Articles in the same Issue
- Titelseiten
- Editorial
- Editorial 2019
- Articles
- Lying press: Three levels of perceived media bias and their relationship with political preferences
- Still marginalized: Gender inequalities in the largest Polish daily’s sports coverage
- Media frames and public perceptions of global poverty in the UK: Is there a link?
- Emotional woman – rational man? Gender stereotypical emotional expressivity of German politicians in news broadcasts
- Genres matter: Video games as predictors of physical aggression among adolescents
- Book Reviews
- Frandsen, F., & Johansen, W. (2017). Organizational crisis communication: A multivocal approach. London: Sage. 280 pp.
- Zienkowski, J. (2017). Articulations of self and politics in activist discourse: A discourse analysis of critical subjectivities in minority debates. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan/Springer Nature. xix + 451pp.
- Carlsson, U., & Pöyhtäri, R. (Eds.) (2017). The assault on journalism. Building knowledge to protect freedom of expression. Göteborg: Nordicom. 378 pp.