Amélie Gilker Beauchamp’s research while affiliated with Université de Montréal and other places

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Publications (1)


Unstandardized regression coefficients (standard error) for the adjusted relationship between pre-existing and concurrent child and family confounding characteristics between ages 5 months and 15 years and violent televiewing at ages 3.5 and 4.5 years for girls and boys.
Prospective Associations Between Preschool Exposure to Violent Televiewing and Externalizing Behavior in Middle Adolescent Boys and Girls
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January 2025

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Amélie Gilker Beauchamp

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Objective. Early childhood exposure to violent media content represents an actionable target for preventive intervention. The associated risks for later aggressive behavior have been established in childhood, but few studies have explored widespread long-term associations with antisocial behavior. We investigate prospective associations between exposure to violent television content in early childhood and subsequent antisocial behavior in mid-adolescence. Method. Participants are 963 girls and 982 boys from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development (QLSCD) birth cohort. Parents reported the frequency of their child’s exposure to violent television content at ages 3.5 and 4.5 years. Four indicators of antisocial behavior were self-reported by participants at age 15 years. These indicators were linearly regressed on exposure to violent television content at ages 3.5 and 4.5 years. All analyses, stratified by sex, controlled for pre-existing and concurrent potential individual and family confounding variables. Results. For boys, preschool violent televiewing was associated with increases in proactive aggression (β = 0.065; 95% CI, 0.001 to 0.089), physical aggression (β = 0.074; 95% CI, 0.040 to 0.487), and antisocial behavior (β = 0.076; 95% CI, 0.013 to 0.140) by mid-adolescence. No prospective associations were found for girls. Conclusions. This study of typically developing children demonstrates long-term perils associated with early exposure to violent content in childhood. We observed risks for aggressive and delinquent behavior in boys, more than a decade later. Preventive intervention campaigns that target knowledge transfer to parents and communities regarding the potential insidious consequences of preschool exposure promise more optimal development in youth.

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Citations (1)


... Traditional values are fading out for the acceptance of unconventional norms. Violence scenes shown on television are implied to have contributed to the increase in crime and other related offences such as juvenile murder cases, high rate of examination failures, bullying, street gangs, cultism, rape, rebellion, disorientation, civil disturbances amongst others (Pagani et al, 2025;Gerdes, 2004). There are quite a number of empirical findings and theories postulating that contents of television programmes have the potential of influencing the behaviour of people watching. ...

Reference:

The Role of Parental Mediation in Mitigating Violent Television Programmes for Children in Ogba Community of Lagos State
Prospective Associations Between Preschool Exposure to Violent Televiewing and Externalizing Behavior in Middle Adolescent Boys and Girls