A new study published in the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science reanalyzed the data potentially linking video games to aggression in children and found little if any correlation between the two. Lead author Christopher Ferguson of Stetson University talks with APS's Charles Blue on the history and plausibility of connecting violent video games with aggressive outcomes in children.
Wendy Wood: It’s Time We Trained Students for Diverse Careers in Psychological Science
Best Of: Revisiting Episodes on the Myers-Briggs Test, the Grieving Brain, and More
Understanding Childhood Adversity Across Time and Cultures
Nobody’s Fool: How to Avoid Getting Taken In
Carl Hart on Clinicians’ Bias Toward Drug Use
Bringing Contexts In, Taking Racism Out: How to Improve Cognitive Psychology
Endless Love: You’ve Got Ideas About Consensual Nonmonogamy. They’re Probably Wrong
Psychology’s Role in the Criminalization of Blackness
Silver Linings in the Demographic Revolution
Industrialized Cheating in Academic Publishing: How to Fight “Paper Mills”
Exploration vs. Exploitation: Adults Are Learning (Once Again) From Children
Lived Experiences Can Be a Strength. So Why the Bias Against “Me-Search”?
Special Episode II: APS 2023 Spence Awardees on Sharing Minds, the Development of Learning, and Implicit Bias
Special Episode I: APS 2023 Spence Awardees on Fresh Starts, Time Perception, and the Well-being of Black Families
Is Cheating Just a Symptom (and Not the Cause) of Declining Relationships?
Stop Oversimplifying Mental Health Diagnoses
A Very Human Answer to One of AI’s Deepest Dilemmas
Top 10 Articles of 2022: Opinionated Fetuses! Cheating Spouses! And Much More
What You Know Changes What and How You See
Children, Creativity, and the Real Key to Intelligence
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