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Hot Years and Serious and Deadly Assaults: Empirical Tests of the Heat Hypothesis

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Hot Years and Serious and Deadly Assaults: Empirical Tests of the Heat Hypothesis
Author(s)Anderson, Craig A.; Bushman, C. J.; Groom R. W.
AbstractTwo archival studies examined the relation between year-to-year shifts in temperature and violent and property crime rates in the United States. Study 1 examined the relation between annual average temperature and crime rate in the years 1950-1995. As expected, a positive relation between temperature and serious and deadly assault was observed, even after time series, linear year, poverty, and population age effects were statistically controlled. Property crime was unrelated to annual average temperature. Study 2 examined the relation between the average number of hot days (=90°F) and the size of the usual summer increase in violence for the years 1950-1995. As expected, a positive relation was observed between number of hot days and magnitude of the summer effect, even after time series and linear year effects were statistically controlled. For property crime, the summer effect was unrelated to number of hot days.
IssueNo
Pages73, 1213 – 1223
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
VolumeNo
PubDate
ISBN_ISSN0022-3514

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