1 Chapter 13 Reactions to Disturbing or Frightening Media Content.
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Transcript of 1 Chapter 13 Reactions to Disturbing or Frightening Media Content.
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Chapter 13
Reactions to Disturbing or Frightening Media Content
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Frightening Stories As Entertainment Throughout history, people have enjoyed
hearing frightening stories. Frightening stories have also been used to
help face personal fears. Dracula and Frankenstein War of the Worlds Friday the 13th
Halloween X-Files
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Explanations for the Appeal of Fright Catharsis
– When viewers witness graphic violence on the screen or read about it in books, they purge or rid themselves of their own violent tendencies or inclinations.
The transformations that monsters undergo provide cathartic relief for teens who are experiencing physical changes as they mature sexually. (Evans, 1984)
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Explanations for the Appeal of Fright People are able to enjoy taboo experiences in
a vicarious manner. (Wood, 1984) Rosenbaum suggested that people enjoy
horror because it encourages a belief in a superior spiritual being capable of destroying evil forces. (1979)
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Measuring Fright
Self-reporting measures– Subjects are shown frightening or disturbing
content, then asked to select words or phrases that best describe their reactions to the content.
Measures of physiological responses– Fright reactions are measured through
physiological responses such as a person’s heart rate.
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Fright Reactions in Children
Parents are usually unaware that their children experienced intense fright reactions.
Parents underestimate the severity or significance of their children’s fright.
Children enjoy being frightened.
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Long-Range Effects of Fright Reactions in Children
Sometimes children react with nightmares after viewing a disturbing program.
Years after seeing a frightening movie, children may experience night “terrors” or have strange fantasies.
Frightening media content threatens to impair psychological development.
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Dynamics of Fear Reactions to Media Content
Classical conditioning is the reason that fright reactions occur despite the fact that the viewer is not in danger and understands that.
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Classical Conditioning
Certain stimuli cause certain responses, and similar stimuli evoke similar, but less intense, responses
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Fear-Producing Stimuli
Three types of media content that result in fear responses in real life:
1. Dangers and injuries
2. Distortions of natural forms
3. Experience of endangerment and fear by others
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Dangers and Injuries
Natural disasters Violent confrontations Major wars Animal attacks Major accidents
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Distortions of Natural Forms
Familiar sights or organisms are shown with a deformity, distortion, or mutilation– Movie monsters
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Experience of Endangerment and Fear by Others
Only category with indirect responses to scary content
Two mechanisms that produce an indirect response of fear:
1. Empathy: identifying with the characters2. Vicarious involvement: fear of audiences in
situations in which characters are unafraid because they are unaware of impending danger
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Emotional Response Factors
3 important factors that cause viewers to react emotionally:
1. Realism of depiction
2. Motivations of the viewer
3. Other factors that affect a viewer’s emotionality
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Realism of Depiction Stimulus generalization: when viewers witness highly
realistic action their fright responses tend to be intensely emotional.
Particular fears of individuals also affect the intensity of emotional responses evoked.
Stimulus discrimination: the ability of audience members at various ages to be able to distinguish screen events from real-life occurrences.
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Motivations of the Viewer
Viewers who want to be entertained might purposely “forget” that the events are being staged in order to enhance enjoyment.
Viewers who want to keep fright reactions to a minimum might continue to remind themselves that the actions are only mediated.
Viewers who watch for informational purposes tend to pay more attention to the program and thus may become more aroused.
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Factors Affecting Viewers’ Emotional Responses
Excitation transfer– Audience members who are aroused before
viewing an exciting or disturbing scene build on that arousal with new responses to film scenes and produce more intense emotional reactions.
Foreshadowing of impending threats enhances the effects of a movie.
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Gender Differences
Social pressures to conform to gender-specific behavior– Girls- scream at horror shows– Boys- self-controlled mastery of the disturbing
content
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Age Differences At different ages children experience different
types of fear reactions:– 3-8 yrs
monsters, ghosts, supernatural creatures, the dark, animals, strange and fast-moving creatures
– 9-12 yrs threats of injury or destruction to self or loved ones
– 12+ personal injury, social and peer pressures and
accompanying fears, & global fears
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Reason for Differences
Cognitive development of children– As children grow older, they respond more
intensely to media depictions that are based more on reality than fantasy or the unrealistic.
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Strategies for Coping With Fear
Noncognitive strategies- do not require the viewer to process verbal information
Cognitive strategies- require the activation of cognitive processes
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Types of Noncognitive Strategies
Visual desensitization Physical activity
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Types of Cognitive Strategies
Children are told to remember that a program is not real.
Offer reassuring information about the minimal danger of any threats presented in the media.
Information can be provided verbally or visually to calm children.