Computer players often deny that playing violent video games makes them aggressive, which is in contrast to the
findings of a recent comprehensive meta-analysis. The present research examines whether comparison processes
between the players' intense acts of violence in a video game and their comparatively harmless aggressive
behavior in daily life not only account for this apparent discrepancy but also underlie the effect of playing violent
video games on aggressive behavior. In fact, two experiments reveal that playing a violent video game leads to a
bias in the perception of what counts as aggressive, which in turn evokes aggressive behavior