2018
DOI: 10.1177/0276236618809902
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Children’s Parasocial Breakups With Media Characters From the Perspective of the Parent

Abstract: Children's parasocial relationships (PSRs) with media characters end through a process called PSR breakups. An online parent report measure was used to describe preschool and school-aged children's breakups with media characters, as well as the attributes of past and current favorite characters. According to parents (N ¼ 138), 51% of children experienced PSR breakups. PSRs lasted about two years before a breakup occurred. Past and current favorite characters were animated, human-like, and embedded in fantastic… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
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“…These findings provide further evidence for the ongoing importance of memorable experiences with characters as a facet of social relationships . It also appears that if children breakup with previous favorite characters (see Aguiar, Richards, Bond, Putnam, & Calvert, 2018), they continue to recall close feelings for them years later, as indicated by the long-term emergence of the attachment and friendship dimension of PSRs with a formerly favorite Poke´mon character. These imaginary characters are also remembered as having human-like needs, such as feeling hungry and sleepy, which means that these adults gave these characters animate qualities that are consistent with being alive (Calvert & Richards, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These findings provide further evidence for the ongoing importance of memorable experiences with characters as a facet of social relationships . It also appears that if children breakup with previous favorite characters (see Aguiar, Richards, Bond, Putnam, & Calvert, 2018), they continue to recall close feelings for them years later, as indicated by the long-term emergence of the attachment and friendship dimension of PSRs with a formerly favorite Poke´mon character. These imaginary characters are also remembered as having human-like needs, such as feeling hungry and sleepy, which means that these adults gave these characters animate qualities that are consistent with being alive (Calvert & Richards, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, socially relevant media characters might not have a lasting impact on children's lives. The typical parasocial relationship lasts about 2 years, and parasocial "breakup" commonly occurs because children outgrow the media character (Aguiar, Richards, Bond, Putnam, & Calvert, 2019;Bond & Calvert, 2014b). In future research, it would be worthwhile to investigate how children's concepts of a socially relevant virtual character differ from novel characters, and the ways in which this might impact an agents' influence on children's behaviors and learning.…”
Section: The Roles Of Parentsmentioning
confidence: 99%