ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Space

Video games with alcohol and smoking content influence teenagers

Washington D.C [India], Oct. 26 (ANI): According to a recent study, playing video games with references to alcohol and tobacco, has a deep influence on teenager's minds.

ANI Oct 26, 2016 17:29 IST googleads

Video games with alcohol and smoking content influence teenagers
Washington D.C [India], Oct. 26 (ANI): According to a recent study, playing video games with references to alcohol and tobacco, has a deep influence on teenager's minds. Experts from the UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies at The University of Nottingham have carried out the first ever analysis of best-selling video games to find out the extent to which the games include this content. They also assessed the link between playing the games and drinking and smoking behaviour. They found that teenagers, who play video games featuring alcohol and tobacco references, appeared to be directly influenced because they were twice as likely to have tried smoking or drinking themselves. The research examined the content of 32 UK best-selling video games of 2012/2013 and carried out a large online survey of adolescents playing games with alcohol and tobacco content. An analysis of 'cut scenes' uploaded by gamers to YouTube from the five most popular games was also carried out. All the games studied were from the genres of stealth, action adventure, open world, shooter and survival/horror because they involve avatars that look and act like real people. The study further found alcohol and tobacco content in 44 percent of the most popular video games. They also found this content was not reported by the official regulator, the Pan-European Games Information (PEGI) system which informs the Video Standards Council age ratings that help parents decide whether game content is suitable for their children. The researchers used YouGov survey tools to ask 1,094 UK adolescents aged 11-17 whether they had played any of the most popular video games identified as containing either tobacco or alcohol imagery. They were also asked whether and to what extent they smoked or drank alcohol. The study found that adolescents, who had played at least one game with tobacco or alcohol content were twice as likely to have tried smoking or consumed alcohol themselves. Psychologist Joanne Cranwell, said "Although around 54 percent of UK adolescents play video games online, parental concern over exposure to inappropriate content while playing video games seems to be lower than for other media, like movies for example. While 80 percent of children aged 10-15 play packaged or online video games with an age rating higher than their age, more than half of British parents are unaware of the harmful content this exposes them to. "Video games are clearly attractive to adolescents regardless of age classification. It appears that official PEGI content descriptors are failing to restrict youth access to age inappropriate content. We think that the PEGI system needs to include both alcohol and tobacco in their content descriptors. Also, game developers could be offered incentives to reduce the amount of smoking and drinking in their games or to at least reference smoking and drinking on their packaging and websites," she said. Adding, "As a child protection method it is naïve for both the games industry and the Interactive Software Federation of Europe, who regulate the PEGI system, to rely on age ratings alone. Future research should focus on identifying the levels of exposure in terms of dose that youth gamers are exposed to during actual gameplay and the effects of this on long- term alcohol and smoking behaviour." The study was published in Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking Journal.(ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Education

Study reveals teens need consistent positive messaging

Study reveals teens need consistent positive messaging

Teenagers suffer academically in multicultural environments if they do not get consistent and positive signals about cultures other than their own at school, home, and among their peers, according to a study from the University of California, Davis.

Read More
Others

Study: Serious disparity in international athletics

Study: Serious disparity in international athletics

Athletes from less rich countries require additional health knowledge to avoid injuries during rigorous training. However, if there is no access to medically qualified personnel, greater knowledge can raise the danger of injury. This is the conclusion reached by researchers at Linkoping University in Sweden in a new study on athletic inequality.

Read More
Others

Teenagers who trust internet information find it less stressful

Teenagers who trust internet information find it less stressful

According to a Cornell-led psychology study, teens' faith in the news they read on social media - or lack thereof - may be key to whether it supports or detracts from their well-being.

Read More
Others

Baking to Bingeing: Make your Sunday fun, lively and relaxing

Baking to Bingeing: Make your Sunday fun, lively and relaxing

Some people prefer going out, some staying indoors. Feel free to pamper yourself on Sunday. If you don't find a company, make it even more special as it's a day for self-indulgence. Here's a list of well-known and not-so-known ways to spend your Sundays.

Read More
Fitness

Researchers come up with smart necklace to help you stop smoking!

Researchers come up with smart necklace to help you stop smoking!

A necklace that could help you quit smoking is on the way. Northwestern Medicine researchers created a smart neck-worn gadget that looks like a lapis blue pendant and detects smoking significantly more reliably than prior systems. It accomplishes this by collecting heat signatures from thermal sensors.

Read More
Quirky

Playing video game causes no harm to cognitive abilities: Study

Playing video game causes no harm to cognitive abilities: Study

New research findings call into question parents' long-held beliefs that children who spend hours upon hours playing video games or chose games of certain genres, will have negative effects on their cognitive abilities.

Read More
Quirky

Music helps to treat substance use disorders in men: Research

Music helps to treat substance use disorders in men: Research

In Peru, music heals more than the soul. Traditional songs, known as icaros, are part of a treatment process for men rehabilitating from drug and alcohol addictions.

Read More
Fitness

New study uncovers negative effects of vaping

New study uncovers negative effects of vaping

A vital layer in the lungs called surfactant, which is composed of lipids and proteins, lowers surface tension to enable humans to breathe easily. Without surfactants, breathing would be more difficult and require assistance from a machine.

Read More
Quirky

Gamers who buy 'loot boxes' two times more likely to gamble

Gamers who buy 'loot boxes' two times more likely to gamble

Gamers who buy 'loot boxes' are up to two times more likely to gamble, shows new research published today in the peer-reviewed journal Addiction Research & Theory.

Read More
Quirky

Study finds 17 minutes of YouTube videos can drive down prejudice

Study finds 17 minutes of YouTube videos can drive down prejudice

Watching just 17 minutes of YouTubers talking about their struggles with mental health drives down prejudice, University of Essex research has suggested.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.