The experiment used a 2 song*2 sex*2 participant pool factorial design. Twenty-nine female students and thirty male students participated in the experiment. Members of a psychology class recruited half of the group; the other half of the group was volunteers for the study. In this experiment the first song had to have clearly violent content, the second song had to have either minimal or no violent content. For control both songs had to be from the same artist, have the same time span, be understandable, and come from the same genre. Participants listened to the assigned song, completed the State Hostility Scale, and completed a longer unrelated task. The State Hostility Scale contains thirty-five sentences describing current feelings. Respondents rate each sentence on a five point scale; 1=strongly disagree, 2=disagree, 3=neither agree nor disagree, 4=agree, 5=strongly agree. As predicted the violent song produced higher levels of state hostility than did the non-violent song. The results of this experiment indicated that the violent content of songs can increase feelings of hostility when compared with similar but non-violent
The experiment used a 2 song*2 sex*2 participant pool factorial design. Twenty-nine female students and thirty male students participated in the experiment. Members of a psychology class recruited half of the group; the other half of the group was volunteers for the study. In this experiment the first song had to have clearly violent content, the second song had to have either minimal or no violent content. For control both songs had to be from the same artist, have the same time span, be understandable, and come from the same genre. Participants listened to the assigned song, completed the State Hostility Scale, and completed a longer unrelated task. The State Hostility Scale contains thirty-five sentences describing current feelings. Respondents rate each sentence on a five point scale; 1=strongly disagree, 2=disagree, 3=neither agree nor disagree, 4=agree, 5=strongly agree. As predicted the violent song produced higher levels of state hostility than did the non-violent song. The results of this experiment indicated that the violent content of songs can increase feelings of hostility when compared with similar but non-violent