Title: Prosocial behavior in the media
1Prosocial behavior in the media
2What do we mean by prosocial
- Not as easy to define as one might think
- Which is more important, the intent or the
effect? - The road to hell is paved with good intentions
- Enlightened self-interest
- Without intent, any good outcome suddenly becomes
evidence of moral behavior - When one group benefits and another is
disadvantaged, is the act prosocial? - Can the actor benefit from pro-social behavior?
Can ones family?
3Prosocial working definition
- For our use, a person will engage in prosocial
behavior when she intentionally commits any act
which will be likely to improve other peoples
welfare overall - The actor can (and as we see later, hopefully
does) feel good about the act - If the actor is really not free to decide whether
to benefit another or not then the action is
really not prosocial, though the person requiring
the beneficial behavior may be acting prosocially - Contributions to Red Cross taken out of your
check while the boss looks on
4What kinds of prosocial acts have been proposed?
- Altruism
- Control of aggressive impulses
- Delay of gratification/task persistence
- Explaining feelings of self or others
- Reparation for bad behavior
- Resistance to temptation
- Sympathy
- Liebert Sprafkin
5Prosocial effects
- The study of prosocial effects of media
portrayals is a minor part of effects study - Most prosocial effects research occurred in late
70s and early 80s
6Researchers of prosocial effects apply theories
akin to those for violence studies
- Social learning (social cognitive) theory
- Affect referal
- Differential effects
- Not catharsis, though
7Scholars have reviewed the findings
- A number of meta-analyses have been produced
- Rushton
- Hearold
- Paik
- Mares
8Most research looks at childrens learning of
prosocial behavior
- Developed as an extension the 1960s-1970s concern
over the application of television to the goal of
public education - Educational content
- Prosocial content
- Often the two are combined (Sesame Street)
9For example, multiple studies of Mr. Rogers
Neighborhood reveal
10Prosocial effects
- Conclusions
- Prosocial content can lead to positive behavioral
outcomes - Effects of exposure to prosocial content are
comparable in strength to those of exposure to
antisocial content - Scholars disagree on which is stronger
- Altruism is the most effective prosocial portrayal
11Prosocial effects
- The effect of prosocial content on boys is not
significantly different from the effect on girls - Paik, 1995
- Prosocial portrayals in family sitcoms have a
greater effect than in educational programming - The effects are positive for all ages
- The effect is greater for donation than for
prosocial play or cooperation - The effect of stereotyping is greater than the
effect of anti-stereotyping content
12Hearold, 1986
- Synthesis of 1,043 studies of effects of
television on social behavior - Effect sizes for prosocial treatments and
behavior, of course, were consistently greater
than for antisocial treatments on behavior. - The implication is that if subjects watched the
antisocial treatments, usually violent programs
or episodes, they would be elevated from the 50th
to the 62nd percentile in antisocial behavior,
typically physical aggression, and if they
watched the prosocial treatment, they would be
elevated from the 50th to the 74th percentile in
prosocial behavior, typically altruism.
13Critique of studies
- Stimulus materials were usually either
- depictions of prosocial behavior developed
specifically to elicit the behavior, or - Either Mister Rogers Neighborhood or Sesame
Street - Normal tv fare sends mixed messages
- prosocial violence
- characters exhibiting good and bad behaviors
14Prosocial content research
- Liebert, Sprafkin, Rubinstein and others (mid
70s) - Greenberg et al. (late 70s)
- Baxter Kaplan (early 80s)
- Lee (late 80s)
- Potter Ware (late 80s)
15Distribution of prosocial acts on Saturday
morning TV, 1970s
16Primetime prosocial behavior
Lee, 1988
17Comparison of pro- and antisocial behavior
primetime (Kaplan Baxter, 1982)
Note 12 hours, 17 programs
18Prosocial content
- The relative incidence of prosocial and
antisocial acts varies widely among studies - Greenberg et al., about 42 pro- and 40 antisocial
acts per hour - Kaplan Baxter, 46 pro- and 17 antisocial acts
per hour - Altruism
- Greenberg et al., 14 acts/hour, most common
pro-social act - Potter Ware, 2 acts/hr, 5th most common
19Prosocial and antisocial acts per hour of
primetime programming
20Prosocial content
- Males engage in the most prosocial acts
- Potter Ware 67 of pro, 80 of anti
- Baxter Kaplan 69 of pro, 78 of anti
- However, there are more male characters
- The great majority of both violent and prosocial
acts are seen as justified - The outcome of prosocial acts was not reviewed
21Proportion of prosocial and antisocial acts
committed by gender(Greenberg et al. primetime
1975-78 study)
22Prosocial content
- Most analyses exclude violent content from
prosocial acts - Some evidence exists of a significant amount of
prosocial violence - Heroes commit a significant amount of violence
- Saturday morning tv
23Liss and Reinhardt
- Regular and prosocial Saturday morning cartoons
- Antagonists commit more violent acts than
protagonists - No significant difference in the amount of
violence on regular and prosocial cartoons
24Prosocial content
- We were interested in
- Relationships among actors
- Involvement of third parties
- Rewards for altruism
- Social support
25The methodfinding and measuring altruism
- Primetime programs recorded for one week on ABC,
NBC and Fox networks - 26.5 hours of programming included in the study
- Only regularly scheduled series included (no
movies, game shows, sports, news) - Unit of analysis the altruistic act
26Defining altruism
- social behavior carried out to achieve positive
outcomes for another rather than for the self
(Rushton, 1980) - must include some nontrivial self-sacrifice
- leaves open the possibility of antisocial altruism
27Acts of altruism
- Risking life, health or safety
- Risking career or future
- Sacrificing money
- Sacrificing or giving up time
- Sacrificing something of personal value, a dream
or satisfaction - Not included common courtesy or minimal
sacrifice
28Coding altruistic acts on TV
- Relationship of the benefactor and beneficiary
- Friends, neighbors or coworkers
- Mere acquaintances
- Strangers
- Superior and subordinate
- Subordinate and superior
- Family
- Lovers or romantically involved
29Coding altruistic acts on TV
- Gender of beneficiary and benefactor
- Relationship to violence
- Involvement of a third party
- Outcome of the act for any third party
- Immediate response to the act by the benefactor
and the beneficiary - Long-term outcome of the act for the benefactor
and the beneficiary
30Measuring altruistic acts on TV
- Coding the justification of the acts
- Was it part of the benefactors job?
- Was it expected under the circumstances?
- Was this above and beyond what would be expected?
31Measuring altruistic acts on TV
- The coding instrument was pretested
- Both authors viewed two hour long programs
- (Neither program included in results)
- Programs were recorded on videotape and later
coded - Second author coded all programs
- No sweeps month programs included
32Research questions
- 1 What is the rate for altruistic behavior in
primetime programming? - 2 Is there a relationship between the gender of
the benefactor and the gender of the beneficiary
of the altruistic acts?
- 3. What is relationship between the benefactor
and the beneficiary? - 4 What is the nature of the altruistic act?
33Research questions
- 5 What are the consequences of the altruistic
act for the benefactor and the beneficiary? - Outcome
- Response
34Results
- 27 acts of altruism identified in 26.5 hours of
primetime programming - Just over one act per hour (1.1 acts/hour)
- Fewer than in previous research
35(No Transcript)
36Relationships portrayed
37Nature of the altruistic act
38Outcome for the actorsPercent of acts (n27)
39Response to the altruism
40Results
- Altruistic acts were rarely tied to violence
- Most acts (63) exceeded expectations for
benefactor behavior based on occupational role or
social norms - The outcome for third parties was negative more
than half the time
41Conclusions
- Results of altruism are as likely to be negative
as to be positive - Gender is less related to TV altruistic acts than
in the past - Altruistic violence is uncommon
42More conclusions
- The definition of altruism is critical to outcome
of the analysis - A larger sample is needed
- Multiple coders are needed
- More extensive analyses are needed
- Monitoring much like violence studies
- Dramatic function of violence and prosocial acts