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        International Herald Tribune, U.S.A.        
        Monday, May 10, 1999  
          A 
        Media-Violence 
        Link?
  Washington 
        Seeks Answers After Massacre  
         
           By 
            Lawrie Mifflin New York Times Service
  New 
        York - In response to the Colorado school shooting, President Bill Clinton 
        is to meet with entertainment industry executives and others at the White 
        House on Monday to discuss youth violence. And on Capitol Hill, Congress 
        is considering a bill that would require the surgeon general to conduct 
        a comprehensive study of the effects of media violence on American youths. 
 
  But most academic researchers 
        say they believe that the evidence is already at the president's and the 
        surgeon general's fingertips. Hundreds of studies done at the nation's 
        top universities in the last three decades have come to the same conclusion: 
        that there is at least some demonstrable link between watching violent 
        acts in movies or television shows and acting aggressively in life. 
 
  Proving such links irrefutably 
        is almost impossible, and many studies have been criticized for methodological 
        or other flaws. But the entire range of studies, taken as a whole, has 
        convinced most social scientists that there is a link. 
 
  "The evidence is overwhelming," 
        said Jeffrey McIntyre, legislative and federal affairs officer for the 
        American Psychological Association. "To argue against it is like arguing 
        against gravity." 
 
  The surgeon general's 
        office has already done two comprehensive overviews of existing studies, 
        the first published in 1972, and the second a 1982 update. Both called 
        television violence a contributing factor to increases in violent crime 
        and antisocial behavior.
  The 
        research does not demonstrate that watching violent acts in films or television 
        shows directly and immediately causes people to commit violent acts. Rather, 
        the scholarly evidence cited by Mr. McIntyre either demonstrates cumulative 
        effects of violent entertainment or establishes it as a "risk factor" 
        that contributes to increasing a person's aggressiveness. 
 
  A few scholars object 
        to this research, saying the links do not prove cause and effect and are 
        therefore relatively unimportant. 
 
  "There's no question 
        there's a correlational link, that children who watch television violence 
        tend to be more aggressive," said Jonathan Freedman, a professor of psychology 
        at the University of Toronto. "It's a very small correlation, but it's 
        there." 
 
  But Mr. Freedman said 
        correlative links could come from many factors, including the likelihood 
        that children who watch a lot of violent television shows are often children 
        who are least supervised by responsible adults. "My reading of the research 
        is it's pathetic in terms of showing the link to be causal," he said. 
 
  Still, from 1990 to 
        1996, major reviews of scientific studies on the subject were conducted 
        by the American Medical Association, the American Psychological Association, 
        the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Academy of Child and 
        Adolescent Psychiatry and the National Institute of Mental Health. 
 
  "All of them said that 
        television violence contributes to real-world violence," said Dale Kunkel, 
        a professor of communications at the University of California at Los Angeles, 
        who also led a three-year study (1996-98), financed by the National Cable 
        Television Association, documenting the amount of television violence 
        and its contexts. 
 
  One of the most academically 
        reputable researchers, Rowell Huesmann of the University of Michigan at 
        Ann Arbor, told a Senate hearing recently: 
 
  "Not every child who 
        watches a lot of violence or plays a lot of violent games will grow up 
        to be violent. Other forces must converge, as they did recently in Colorado. 
        But just as every cigarette increases the chance that someday you will 
        get lung cancer, every exposure to violence increases the chances that 
        some day a child will behave more violently than they otherwise would." 
 
  Network executives have 
        been reluctant to talk about the subject, either fearing to appear insensitive 
        in the wake of the Colorado shooting on April 20 or fearing high-profile 
        political attacks on the day of the White House meeting. 
 
  But network and movie 
        studio executives, as well as producers and writers, have repeatedly bristled 
        at the academic findings, arguing that the link found is far too small 
        to warrant the attention paid to them. The executives also accuse social 
        scientists of looking for easy solutions - censoring or restricting entertainment 
        media - to avoid confronting more difficult solutions, like reducing poverty, 
        improving child-rearing skills and child care services, or restricting 
        the availability of guns. 
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