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Study sees link between video games and play

4:01
New study looks at impact of video games on young gamers
STOCK PHOTO/Shutterstock
ByDr. Tiffany Best
May 31, 2019, 11:03 PM

Even as questions about the relationship between violent video games and shootings have been asked with growing urgency, a dearth of good data has made it difficult to draw any definitive conclusions.

In a study published study in the JAMA Network on Friday, researchers from Ohio State University claim to have found a link.

“This is one of the first studies to show a relationship between violent video games and the risk for gun violence," the study's author, Brad Bushman, told ABC News.

To conduct the study, researchers brought in a group of children between the ages of 8 to 12, and split them into different groups. Some played a more violent version of a video game using either a sword or a gun, while others played a nonviolent version of the same video game. After 20 minutes, the children were placed in pairs and assigned to a play room, where there was a variety of toys and games. To simulate a gun being hidden in the home, two unloaded guns were placed in cabinets in the same play room.

PHOTO: A child plays a video game in this stock photo.
STOCK PHOTO/Getty Images

The children were video recorded during the entire encounter, and researchers observed their behavior.

Researchers concluded that there was a “direct relationship between children who played the more violent version of the video game and unsafe gun behaviors."

"These children were more likely to touch a gun, spend a longer time holding the gun, pull the trigger, and pull the trigger towards oneself or others,” compared to the children who played the nonviolent version of the game, they said.

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(MORE: Parents often don't lock up or unload guns, even when kids have mental illness: Study)

Children who played the violent version of the game were observed pointing the gun at themselves or another person more than those who played the non-violent version of the game, Bushman said.

Joe Hilgard, a professor at Illinois State University who also studies video games and aggressive behavior, said that he reviewed Bushman’s study and doesn’t believe the data represents as strong a relationship between guns and violence as indicated in the study.

“Yes, families should make firearms less accessible to children,” he said.

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(MORE: Shots Fired: Gun Violence in America)

The National Rifle Association provides The Eddie Eagle Gunsafe Program that teaches young children safety procedures to follow if they encounter a gun.

A 2018 study published in the Journal of Urban Health https://www.thetrace.org/rounds/study-american-children-unlocked-loaded-gun-storage/Your text to link... that 4.6 million American children live in a home where at least one gun is kept loaded and unlocked.

Tiffany Best, MD is a child and adolescent psychiatrist from Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, working with the ABC News Med unit.

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