Grand Theft Childhood is a new book written by Dr. Lawrence Kutner and Dr. Cheryl Olson, a husband-and-wife team who co-founded the Harvard Medical School Center for Mental Health and Media. In the video above, Drs. Kutner and Olson talk with X-Play’s Adam Sessler about some of the findings from the study documented in their book.

Some notes:

  • Their study lasted several years and received $1.5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Justice.
  • In their study, they surveyed and interviewed over 1250 kids and 500 parents.
  • There is “absolutely no evidence” that playing violent video games turns children violent.
  • What’s more important are patterns of play — there are some that parents and teachers should note.
  • In their research, Drs. Kutner and Olson tried to find out which videogame playing behaviours are normal, and which aren’t, a cataloguing of behaviours that did not previously exist in the literature on this topic.
  • They debunked the experimental methodologies used by researchers who’ve made the vidogames-violence connection.
  • One of the flaws in those older experiements was that it didn’t take short-term vs. long-term behavioural effects into account. He cited an example of boys’ horseplay after seeing an action film: it wears off pretty quickly.
  • They found that both boys and girls who played M-rated or violent videogames exclusively more than 15 hours a week to be statistically more like to get into trouble, but they also found that boys who didn’t play videogames at all were also at greater risk.
  • At least for boys, gaming is a marker of social competence.
  • Consider the case of the Virginia tech shooter: although the pundits were quick to place the blame on videogames, he didn’t play them at all, and his dorm-mates said he wouldn’t play videogames with them.
  • Kutner: “Kids who don’t play [videogames] at all are actually at greater risk for getting into trouble. It says something about their social relationships.”

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What Makes a Great Developer?

by Joey deVilla on April 17, 2008

What Makes a Great Developer? According to I Love Jack Daniels: pessimism, laziness, curiosity and being meticulous.

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Why I Took the Job Title “Nerd Wrangler”

by Joey deVilla on April 17, 2008

Why I Took the Job Title “Nerd Wrangler”: When I accepted the position of b5media’s technical project manager, Jeremy Wright said “come up with a less-formal sounding title”. I did a little Googling and figured that I could “own” the term “Nerd Wrangler”. It’s happened — I pretty much own the first page of results for the search term “nerd wrangler”, with and without quotes.

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Python Coding Style Guides

by Joey deVilla on April 17, 2008

Python coding style guides. It’s hard to point to a Python “killer app” the way you can for Ruby (whose killer app is so “killer” that it’s often conflated with it). However, Python has something that Ruby doesn’t have: a “killer user”, namely Google, which has declared it one of the four accepted languages for their internal use (the others are C++, Java and JavaScript). Python’s a language worth learning, and its endorsement by Google means that you’re more likely to encounter it. Here are a couple of Python coding style guides that you might find handy, whether you’re learning Python or are a longtime Python coder: Python Enhancement Proposal 8: Style Guide for Python Code and Code Like a Pythonista: Idiomatic Python.

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Joel Spolsky on StackOverflow.com

by Joey deVilla on April 17, 2008

Joel Spolsky on StackOverflow.com: Now that we’ve heard from Jeff Atwood about StackOverflow.com, here’s what the other guy behind the project has to say.

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