Mature-rated Video Games Often Include Content Not Specified On Warning Labels
Main Category: Pediatrics / Children's HealthArticle Date: 05 Apr 2006 - 19:00 PDT
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Over 80 percent of mature-rated video games portrayed acts involving violence, blood, sex, profanity or substances not included in the games' content warning labels, according to an article in the April issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, a theme issue on children and the media.
The Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) assigns age-based rating symbols and content descriptors that appear on video game boxes to inform consumers about game content, according to background information in the article. Although games rated M (for "mature") are intended for ages 17 years and older, the Federal Trade Commission reported that in 2002 consumers purchased almost 40 percent of M-rated video games for children younger than age 17 years. The FTC also reported that 69 percent of unaccompanied children aged 13 to 16 years were able to purchase M-rated video games.
Kimberly M. Thompson, Sc.D., and colleagues from the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, played and analyzed M-rated video games in order to assess their content and compared it to the ESRB descriptions accompanying each game. The researchers randomly selected to play 25 percent of 147 identified M-rated video games. After recording one hour of play, the researchers then divided the game into one-second intervals and analyzed them for violence, blood, sex, profanity, gambling and drug and alcohol content.
Of the 36 M-rated games played, nearly all received content descriptors for violence and blood and contained violence and blood. In approximately 42 hours of video game playing, the researchers observed 6,011 characters deaths due to violence, occurring at an average rate of 145 character deaths per hour; this included 4,268 human deaths, occurring at an average rate of 104 human deaths per hour. "M-rated video games are significantly more likely to contain blood, profanity and substances; depict more severe injuries to human and nonhuman characters; and have a higher rate of human deaths than video games rated T (for 'teen')," the authors write.
"These results confirm that the presence of an ESRB content descriptor means that game players likely will find the indicated content in the game but that parents should not interpret the absence of a content descriptor to mean the absence of content," they conclude. "Parents and physicians should recognize that popular M-rated games contain a wide range of unlabeled content and may expose children and adolescents to messages that may negatively influence their perceptions, attitudes and behaviors."
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(Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2006; 160: 402 - 410. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://www.jamamedia.org/.)
Editor's Note: This research received support from gifts to the Kids Risk Project, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston.
Contact: Todd Datz
JAMA and Archives Journals
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/40905.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Are people getting lazy or stupid
posted by Michael Cunningham on 6 Apr 2006 at 8:22 am The "M" rating is for mature not maybe mature just like when a movie is rated "R". Next to the"M" you will see 17+ , I have seen many kids try to buy these games unsuccesfully on several ocasions and at different stores. It's pretty hard to buy these if you're not old enough.
The point is that the parents are the culprits not the ESRB. Parents these days would rather buy whatever the kids want to shut them up rather than see the "M" and not buy it for them.When I was a kid my parents would not let me go to an"R" movie - period. They didn't need to know why it was R, it got that rating because it was not intended to be viewed by children. Same with the "M" rating. This is not rocket science it's people blaming the gaming industry for their lack of parenting skills. Parents need to be more aware of what their kids are doing and learn to say NO.
If you can't ,then just buy them some smokes, a 12 pack and give them the keys to your car because there's no "M" on those.
Ha! So True!
posted by Katrina Lamban on 20 Apr 2007 at 11:26 pmI believe so - and usually if adults get the blaming they resort to making excuses that they've been tired or stressed out of whatever kind of work they're doing. Well lie or not, it's still no good excuse to not guide and carefully watch your kid(s).
They brought them to this world, so now they must raise them in good mannerful ways. It makes parents look stupid if they don't teach their kids to not get something not meant for their age group; this is what's causing these adult wannabe youths today who are mainly after the full mature, erotic looks without sufficient mature knowledge (hey, just look at the media, movies, magazines, and even Hollywood these days).
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