Penn and Teller are not bound by the ethical code psychologists must follow. They are therefore allowed to have a nine-year-old shoot a real rifle with real bullets on TV under the supervision of a weapon specialist. I don't see anything like this getting past a university ethics committee, but I'm sure the mother gave consent. I won't spoil what happened, but this is one powerful way to show that any concerns about young violent video gamers actually gun toting given the opportunity is ill-conceived, and as far as I'm aware this is the first piece of evidence of its kind. Despite its many flaws this mini experiment certainly makes its point.
Video Games Increase Violent Tendencies? An Unorthodox Experiment Suggesting the Contrary
Labels:
children,
ethics,
penn and teller,
violence
Biological Updated with Videos
Looking at my stats for this blog I noticed that Biological is by far the most popular. I have updated it with more information and embedded video clips from Simpsons and House to illustrate theories and concepts. Hopefully this brings the theories to life a bit more which is one of IB Psych Revision's main goals.
Labels:
biological,
house,
simpsons,
update,
videos
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)