In this article we reply to C. J. Ferguson and J. Kilburn’s (2010) critique of our meta-analysis on violent
video game effects (C. A. Anderson et al., 2010). We rely on well-established methodological and
statistical theory and on empirical data to show that claims of bias and misinterpretation on our part are
simply wrong. One should not systematically exclude unpublished studies from meta-analytic reviews.
There is no evidence of publication or selection bias in our data. We did not purposely exclude certain
studies; we included all studies that met our inclusion criteria. Although C. J. Ferguson and J. Kilburn
believe that the effects we obtained are trivial in size, they are larger than many effects that are deemed
sufficiently large to warrant action in medical and violence domains. The claim that we (and other media
violence scholars) are attempting to create a false crisis is a red herring.
%0 Journal Article
%1 bushman2010much
%A Bushman, Brad J.
%A Rothstein, Hannah R.
%A Anderson, Craig A.
%D 2010
%I American Psychological Association
%J Psychological bulletin
%K education game games haifa-games-course learning video vio violence
%N 2
%P 182-187
%T Much Ado About Something: Violent Video Game Effects and a School of Red Herring: Reply to Ferguson and Kilburn (2010)
%U http://www.psychology.iastate.edu/faculty/caa/abstracts/2010-2014/10BRA.pdf
%V 136
%X In this article we reply to C. J. Ferguson and J. Kilburn’s (2010) critique of our meta-analysis on violent
video game effects (C. A. Anderson et al., 2010). We rely on well-established methodological and
statistical theory and on empirical data to show that claims of bias and misinterpretation on our part are
simply wrong. One should not systematically exclude unpublished studies from meta-analytic reviews.
There is no evidence of publication or selection bias in our data. We did not purposely exclude certain
studies; we included all studies that met our inclusion criteria. Although C. J. Ferguson and J. Kilburn
believe that the effects we obtained are trivial in size, they are larger than many effects that are deemed
sufficiently large to warrant action in medical and violence domains. The claim that we (and other media
violence scholars) are attempting to create a false crisis is a red herring.
@article{bushman2010much,
abstract = {In this article we reply to C. J. Ferguson and J. Kilburn’s (2010) critique of our meta-analysis on violent
video game effects (C. A. Anderson et al., 2010). We rely on well-established methodological and
statistical theory and on empirical data to show that claims of bias and misinterpretation on our part are
simply wrong. One should not systematically exclude unpublished studies from meta-analytic reviews.
There is no evidence of publication or selection bias in our data. We did not purposely exclude certain
studies; we included all studies that met our inclusion criteria. Although C. J. Ferguson and J. Kilburn
believe that the effects we obtained are trivial in size, they are larger than many effects that are deemed
sufficiently large to warrant action in medical and violence domains. The claim that we (and other media
violence scholars) are attempting to create a false crisis is a red herring.},
added-at = {2010-09-21T15:00:45.000+0200},
author = {Bushman, Brad J. and Rothstein, Hannah R. and Anderson, Craig A.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/26d82ff7f6c5602261c67d68b1a4aa686/yish},
interhash = {e9355cb694d24e29734df2d40331c74b},
intrahash = {6d82ff7f6c5602261c67d68b1a4aa686},
journal = {Psychological bulletin},
keywords = {education game games haifa-games-course learning video vio violence},
number = 2,
pages = {182-187},
publisher = {American Psychological Association},
timestamp = {2010-09-21T15:00:45.000+0200},
title = {Much Ado About Something: Violent Video Game Effects and a School of Red Herring: Reply to Ferguson and Kilburn (2010)},
url = {http://www.psychology.iastate.edu/faculty/caa/abstracts/2010-2014/10BRA.pdf},
volume = 136,
year = 2010
}