Repeated Play Reduces Video Games' Ability to Elicit Guilt: Evidence from a Longitudinal Experi...

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Repeated Play Reduces Video Games' Ability to Elicit Guilt: Evidence from a Longitudinal Experiment;
Authors and Corporations: Tamborini, Ron, Sherry, John L, Weber, René
In: Media psychology, 20, 2017, 2
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
ISSN: 1521-3269
published in: Media psychology
Language: English
Collection: OLC SSG Medien- / Kommunikationswissenschaft
Table of Contents

Statements supported mostly by correlational and cross-sectional studies suggest that playing violent video games can cause emotional desensitization. A longitudinal experiment examined a) whether repeated violent game play leads to emotional desensitization and b) whether desensitization generalizes to other play and real-life experiences. Participants played alternative versions of the same violent game for the first four days; on these days, the character role was varied between-subjects to be moral (United Nations soldier) or immoral (terrorist soldier). On Day 5, all participants played a novel game as a terrorist. Results indicate two things. First, habituation occurs over repeated game play: Repeated exposure decreased the ability of the original game to elicit guilt. Second, the decreased ability to elicit guilt can generalize to other game-play experiences: Guilt elicited by the novel game on Day 5 was reduced for the immoral character condition compared to the moral character condition. The current study provides causal, longitudinal evidence regarding the potential for video game play to lead to emotional desensitization with regard to future video game-play experiences.