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Articles

Explaining parental coviewing: The role of social facilitation and arousal

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Pages 365-384 | Received 29 Aug 2016, Accepted 26 Oct 2016, Published online: 24 Nov 2016
 

ABSTRACT

This study explores the relationship between parental coviewing and children’s psychophysiological responses to television exposure within a framework of social facilitation. A total of 88 children aged 6–13 years and one of each of their parents participated in a 2 (presence or absence of the parent) × 2 (exciting or non-exciting TV content) between-subjects experiment. Results indicated that the presence of a coviewing parent was associated with an increase in children’s arousal (higher skin conductance levels) and cognitive resource allocation (lower heart rate), especially for younger children who came from homes where parental coviewing was a relatively frequent activity. These findings suggest that the mere presence of a coviewing parent is sufficient to alter children’s processing of television messages.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Pavel Panko and the Texas Tech University Institute for Measurement, Methodology, Analysis & Policy for their valuable contribution to this manuscript.

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