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Cultivation Theory & Video Game Violence

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Uploaded by on Mar 20, 2007

Time-based project 2...about the old theory in the 70s...and how it connect with today's issue - video game violence...

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  • I've never seen communication theory this interesting!

  • @topspinsam: Well if that is indeed the case about Cultivation Theory, then it makes the message of this video and what it's trying to say even more false than it already was.

    When Columbine happened, there were some anti-violence in media groups that attempted to use theories like these to explain why it happened, using the video games Kleibold and Harris played as evidence, which is total horsecrap because the majority of shooter players and other violent vids are normal people.

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  • @SmokyOwl Experts estimate that only 5-15% of violent crimes is affected by media (tv, video games...). That means that there is more to violent behavior, of course. Also, only app. one tenth of people is prone to violence, therefore the rest is probably not affected by media this way. But that does not mean that it is not a problem...

  • Would I not be as good as a shot with a rifle had it not been for my gaming addiction? Probably. Did it turn me into a murderous swine? No. There's more to violent behavior than just videogames and television.

  • @WarriorBoy You know what's funny is that cultivation theory was not intended to be applied to video games. It was created to explain television. Many people try to apply it to all sorts of areas. Ex internet, video games, cellphones... The theory was not intended for this. I really enjoy first person shooters and I don't find them affecting me.

  • @topspinsam: I never said that Cultivation Theory exclusively claims that only TV influences our perception. If you look at my comment, it's actually about video games, which the entire video relates to.

    But the real point being that any perception of social norms gleaned from playing video games a child will always be overridden by parenting and nurture, either bad or good.

    Real-life experiences will always speak to someone more than what they perceive in the media.

  • @WarriorBoy Cultivation theory does not argue that only TV influences our perception of reality. It does argue that TV does influence our perception of what the norms of society are. Before television, religion, family, school, etc... use to play this major role. Now television, in many cases, plays that role. However, if you do some research on the subject the original theory has been criticized in studies and proposed changes have been made.

  • @WarriorBoy continuing on: the Cultivation Theory is absurd. It claims that TV viewing can change the viewer's perception of reality, but can't anything? If you were poor all your life and never left the ghetto, I believe you'd start to develop "Mean World Syndrome" just as quickly.

    Reality is perceived and experienced individually, and multiple things affect this perception for each human being. TV will not affect your perception of reality as much as losing a loved one, for example.

  • Good editing, and I know many of these are not your points but rather things you've researched and put into the video, but I have a problem with a lot of what's brought up.

    -Video games can't possibly train children in the use of firearms. The noise, kickback, weight of the weapon, safety mechanisms and aiming differential can't be covered by a video game. There are simply too many factors about real world firearm usage that a game cannot cover.

  • tnx was gr8

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