
Cartoons aimed at children, such as Scooby Doo, contain more brutality than programmes meant for general audiences, a study has found
High levels of violence in cartoons such as
Scooby-Doo can make children more aggressive, researchers claimed yesterday.
They found that animated shows aimed at youngsters often have more brutality than programmes broadcast for general audiences.
And they said children copied and identified with fantasy characters just as much as they would with screen actors.
Cartoons aimed at children, such as
Scooby Doo, contain more brutality than programmes meant for general audiences, a study has found
The study also found that youngsters tended to mimic the negative behaviour they saw on TV such as rumour-spreading, gossiping and eye-rolling.
The U.S. psychologists quizzed 95 girls aged ten and 11 about their favourite TV shows, rating them for violent content and verbal and indirect aggression.
The shows included
Lost,
Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
American Idol,
Scooby-Doo and
Pokemon.
The researchers found that output aimed at children as young as seven, which included a number of cartoons, had the highest levels of violence.