Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Friday 28 December 2018

Risky Behavior Comes From The Movies

Risky Behavior Comes From The Movies.
Violent motion picture characters are also apposite to drink alcohol, smoke cigarettes and engage in sexual behavior in films rated seemly for children over 12, according to a new study. "Parents should be aware that youth who watch PG-13 movies will be exposed to characters whose intensity is linked to other more common behaviors, such as alcohol and sex, and that they should cogitate on whether they want their children exposed to that influence," said study lead author Amy Bleakley, a protocol research scientist at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg Public Policy Center. It's not unobstructed what this means for children who watch popular movies, however.

There's intense debate among experts over whether energy on screen has any direct connection to what people do in real life. Even if there is a link, the new findings don't indicate whether the violent characters are glamorized or portrayed as villains. And the study's outlining of violence was broad, encompassing 89 percent of popular G- and PG-rated movies. The study, which was published in the January printing of the journal Pediatrics, sought to find out if violent characters also wrapped up in other risky behaviors in films viewed by teens.

Bleakley and her colleagues have published several studies lesson that kids who watch more fictional violence on screen become more violent themselves. Their research has come under berate from critics who argue it's difficult to gauge the impact of movies, TV and video games when so many other things upon children. In September 2013, more than 200 people from academic institutions sent a proclamation to the American Psychological Association saying it wrongly relied on "inconsistent or unconvincing evidence" in its attempts to connect violence in the media to real-life violence.

For the new study, the researchers analyzed almost 400 top-grossing movies from 1985 to 2010 with an optic on violence and its connection to sensual behavior, tobacco smoking and alcohol use. The movies in the sample weren't chosen based on their solicit to children, so adult-oriented films little seen by kids might have been included. The researchers found that about 90 percent of the movies included at least one significance of violence involving a main character.

Tuesday 25 April 2017

Heroes Of Cartoon Films Promote Fast Food

Heroes Of Cartoon Films Promote Fast Food.
Popular children's movies, from "Kung Fu Panda" to "Shrek the Third," restrict diverse messages about eating habits and obesity, a unusual study says. Many of these animated and live-action movies are regretful of "glamorizing" unhealthy eating and inactivity, while at the same time condemning obesity, according to study corresponding creator Dr Eliana Perrin, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine. She and her colleagues analyzed 20 top-grossing G- and PG-rated movies from 2006 to 2010.

Clips from each motion picture were examined for their depictions of eating, true activity and obesity. The findings show that many approved children's movies "present a mixed message to children: promoting infirm behaviors while stigmatizing the behaviors' possible effects," the researchers said.

Monday 23 June 2014

Adolescents Who Watch R-Movies Smoke Are Three Times More Often

Adolescents Who Watch R-Movies Smoke Are Three Times More Often.
Teens who are allowed to safeguard R-rated movies are more no doubt to take up smoking than teens whose parents rod them from viewing mature movie content, according to new research. In fact, the burn the midnight oil authors estimated that if 10- to 14-year-olds were completely restricted from viewing R-rated movies, their endanger of starting to smoke could drop two to threefold. However, the study found that only one in three inexperienced American teens is restricted from viewing R-rated films, which are restricted at the box office to teens 17 and older unless the boy is accompanied by an adult.

And "When watching popular movies, whippersnapper are exposed to many risk behaviors, including smoking, which is rarely displayed with negative trim consequences and most often portrayed in a positive manner or glamorized to some extent. Previous studies have shown that adolescents who take in movie smoking are more likely to begin smoking," said the study's lead author, Rebecca de Leeuw, a doctoral swotter at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands.

So "Our findings tell that parental R-rated movie restrictions were directly related to a lower risk of smoking initiation, but also indirectly through changes in children's furor seeking," de Leeuw added. "Sensation seeking is coupled to a higher risk for smoking onset. However, children with parents who restrict them from watching R-rated movies were less probable to develop higher levels of sensation seeking and, subsequently, at a degrade risk for smoking onset," she explained.

Findings from the study are scheduled to appear in the January issue of Pediatrics. The writing-room included data from a random sample of 6522 American children between the ages of 10 and 14 years old. The middling age of the children at the start of the investigation was 12. The children were followed for two years, and given periodic re-evaluations at 8, 16 and 24 months to associate with if they had begun smoking during that time period.