Page 296 - Media Effects Advances in Theory and Research
P. 296
10. EFFECTS OF MEDIA VIOLENCE 285
Sparks, G. G., & Sparks, C. W. (2000). Violence, mayhem, and horror. In D. Zillmann &
P. Vorderer (Eds.), Media entertainment: The psychology of its appeal (pp. 73–91). Mah-
wah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Stein, A. H., & Friedrich, L. K. (1972). Television content and young children’s behavior.
In J. P. Murray, E. A. Rubinstein, & G. A. Comstock (Eds.), Television and social behavior:
Vol. II. Television and social learning (pp. 202–317). Washington, DC: U.S. Government
Printing Office.
Wertham, F. (1954). Seduction of the innocent. New York: Holt Rinehart.
Williams, T. M. (1986). The impact of television. New York: Academic Press.
Wilson, B. J., Kunkel, D., Linz, D., Potter, J., Donnerstein, E., Smith, S. L., Blumenthal, E.,
& Gray, T. (1997). The effects of exposure to media violence. In National Television Vio-
lence Study (Vol. 1, pp. 8–18). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Wood, W., Wong, F. Y., & Chachere, J. G. (1991). Effects of media violence on viewers’
aggression in unconstrained social interaction. Psychological Bulletin, 109, 371–383.
Zillmann, D. (1991). Television viewing and physiological arousal. In J. Bryant & D. Zill-
mann (Eds.), Responding to the screen: Reception and reaction processes (pp. 103–133).
Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Zillmann, D., & Weaver, J. B., III. (1997). Psychoticism in the effect of prolonged exposure
to gratuitous media violence on the acceptance of violence as a preferred means of
conflict resolution. Personality & Individual Differences, 22(5), 613–627.
Zillmann, D., & Weaver, J. B., III. (1999). Effects of prolonged exposure to gratuitous
media violence on provoked and unprovoked hostile behavior. Journal of Applied
Social Psychology, 29(1), 145–165.