Superheroes: Helping or hurting children?

Could superheroes make children participate in more dangerous play time? A UAB graduate research assistant is conducting a study to see whether superheroes could be related to adolescent injuries.

Young boys (3 yrs and 6yrs) in capes playing in backyardWhen thinking of superheroes, thoughts of masks, capes and superpowers may come to mind. For children, superheroes in shows and movies could teach bravery and courage, but two University of Alabama at Birmingham researchers are studying whether they could also be related to increased risk of injuries in children.

David Schwebel, Ph.D., director of the UAB College of Arts and SciencesYouth Safety Lab, and Casie Morgan, M.A., graduate research assistant in the UAB Department of Psychology, are leading the study, “Superhero media and risk-taking: Is Superhero play a risk factor for unintentional injury in preschool-aged children?” They hope to reveal whether consumption of superhero media and imitation of superhero characters might cause children to think that — just like superheroes — they too are invincible.

“This research is important because youth unintentional injuries or accidents are a major public health crisis,” Morgan said. “According to the CDC, about 1,400 American children ages 1 to 5 are killed by injuries each year, and another 1.7 million are seriously hurt.”

During the study, participants ages 4 and 5 will be split into two groups — one group dressing up as superheroes and one group dressing up as students going to school.

Each group will participate in the same four behavioral tasks:

  • an ability test that assesses a child’s perception of their physical abilities;
  • an imagination task that assesses the child’s level of creativity;
  • a picture sort task that involves responding to pictures of children doing risky things and deciding whether or not they would engage in the same behavior; and
  • an activity room task — a secure playroom set up for the child to free play for five minutes.

“Our goal is to see whether those children who are dressed and prompted to behave as superheroes will be influenced and show more risky behavior compared to those who are dressed in ‘everyday’ clothes prompted to behave like students at school,” Morgan said.   

Through the research, Schwebel and Morgan plan to study:

  • whether children pretending to be superheroes engage in riskier play;
  • whether children who identify with superheroes have risker behavior; and
  • whether children who are more imaginative have a greater chance of engaging in a pretend superhero role, increasing the chance of injury, over children who are less imaginative.

“This area of research is able to target a particular area of injury risk — play behavior — for young children,” Morgan said. “We hope our research can help with injury prevention efforts for preschool-age children during play.” 

The study is currently accepting participants. For more information, contact Casie Morgan at chmorgan@uab.edu.