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Science

Thumbs Are the New Fingers for GameBoy Youth 386

An anonymous reader writes "Reuters is running an interesting story on how the use of gadgets such as mobile phones and GameBoys has caused a physical mutation in young people's hands. The use of the thumb is a deviation from the use of the index finger..."
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Thumbs Are the New Fingers for GameBoy Youth

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  • So, an invention caused a DNA change? Try "adaptation", Reuters.

    Of course, these are the people that won't call a suicide bomber who kills 3000 people a "terrorist".
    • Okay, as much as they fucked up with the whole "mutation" thing, you can't say that their refusal to use the word "terrorist" is not noble, at least within the context of journalism.

      Reuter's editorial policy is that they will never use the term "terrorist" or "freedom fighter" or whatever, unless they are quoting. The goal is to be objective, and since Reuters is an international news service, they cannot afford to be US-centric or centered on the terminology of any nation.

      Remember, one person's terrorist is another person's freedom-fighter. The word terrorist is very loaded. Reclaim The Streets! parties have been labelled terrorists simply for dancing in the streets. The French resistance against the Nazis was also called terrorism. It would be unethical, in the context of objective journalism, to use any government's definition of terrorism, so Reuters simply refuses to use the term, unless they are quoting.

      Now, honestly, is that so bad?

      (I do agree that journalism can never be truly objective, which is why I support media projects like the Independant Media Center, which wear their bias on their sleeves, but that's a debate for another day)
      • I really like your comment, and if I had five moderation points I would give them all to you.

        I believe that journalism is never objective, and that much of the best groundbreaking journalism is honestly partisan.

        Consider that many of the reporters in a given area who attempt to cover both sides are stuck in a capital city listening to spokespeople. A war correspondent who covers the force of one side will have much more insight into that limited aspect of the conflict.

        I see each news as a piece - when I write an article it's a "piece.." I put the pieces together, attempting to triangulate for various kinds of bias, when I read the news.
      • Here is a discussion of different definitions of terrorism. [crf-usa.org] Whatever definition you accept, it is a highly charged and ambiguous word. This page [ict.org.il] goes deeper into the subject and contains a fascinating interview snippet with a State Department official. While seeming to have a clear definition of terrorism, the official evades questions and ultimately states, "I do not think it will be productive to get into a description of the various terms and conditions under which we are going to define an act by the PLO as terrorism."

        In other words, the US reserves the right to define terrorism as it goes. I can't blame Reuters for steering clear of this word.
      • >Remember, one person's terrorist is another
        >person's freedom-fighter

        Whose freedom was being fought for when the airliners flew into the World Trade Center?

        I keep hearing this little soundbite, and nobody has been able to answer that question.

        -l

    • Lamarckian inheritance lives!
    • That must mean it's true.
      New research carried out in nine cities around the world shows that the thumbs of people under the age of 25 have taken over as the hand's most dexterous digit, said The Observer.

      My research shows I've become very adept at casting spells in video games.

      Oh, and sorry about turning any readers into a newt, this morning, I'm still working on that one.

    • They never said there was a genetic mutation. Their use of the word was perfectly correct.

      Mutation [dictionary.com]
      1. The act or process of being altered or changed.
      2. An alteration or change, as in nature, form, or quality.
      3. Genetics.
      1. A change of the DNA sequence within a gene or chromosome of an organism resulting in the creation of a new character or trait not found in the parental type.
      2. The process by which such a change occurs in a chromosome, either through an alteration in the nucleotide sequence of the DNA coding for a gene or through a change in the physical arrangement of a chromosome.
      3. A mutant.
      4. Linguistics. The change that is caused in a sound by its assimilation to another sound, such as umlaut.
      • I think Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles altered the general perception of the word mutation a bit. All kidding aside, I can imagine a 20 year old today having a different idea about it than the 40 year old who wrote this article.
  • cows don't play Nintendo - No opposible thumbs.
  • Not a mutation (Score:5, Informative)

    by Jonathan ( 5011 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:01PM (#3216045) Homepage
    It is possible that the use of hand-held devices make one's own thumbs more dextrous, but that certainly doesn't cause a mutation, which is a genetic change. That would be Lamarkian inheritance of accquired characteristics. Both Slashdot and the article are using a completely incorrect term.

    • Re:Not a mutation (Score:5, Informative)

      by bloggins02 ( 468782 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @01:30PM (#3216308)
      MODERATORS!!! Are you on crack? This is in no way "off-topic". The shift in allele frequencies to favor this trait through evolution would:

      a) not have happened yet, there hasn't been enough time

      b) not happen at all. How does scoring more points on your gameboy increase your reproductive fitness?

      Thus, the only way to posit that the latest generations have somehow developed a "mutation" which causes their thumbs to be more nimble is to invoke Lamarkism (which is primarily the view that acquired changes in the genetic code are inhereted by the next generation). This view has been refuted in so many ways it's not even funny, and for slashdot and the publication to use the word "mutation" clearly shows a lack of understanding of the fundamental processes of evolution.

      Why not try the more obvious approach: those people who have had to use their thumbs in more exacting roles tend to increase their skills in the use of their thumbs.

      Would you say it was a mutation that was causing all piano players to have more dextrous hands?

      • by Anonymous Coward
        b) not happen at all. How does scoring more points on your gameboy increase your reproductive fitness?
        Come on, you must be kidding!

        I've lost the count of the number of times I've heard "no sex till you share your pokémons with me"!

        Being able to catch strange creatures give you a definitive advantage (some call it sex-appeal).

      • by apg ( 66778 )

        How does scoring more points on your gameboy increase your reproductive fitness?

        Those Verizon Wireless ads seem to make it pretty clear that people who are better at sending text messages get all the hot chicks.

    • This is the worst misuse of the word "mutation" since TMNT.

    • What I really wonder is how all those 10-year-olds learned to use set! on their thumbs..

      Daniel
    • The article clearly says "physical mutation" and in no way implies anything genetic going on.

      Nothing wrong with that use of the word.
  • by JoshKOTW ( 548288 ) <joshkotw@h o t m ail.com> on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:01PM (#3216046) Homepage
    Except for the fact that our eyesight is going down the tubes for playing all these games. We are going to be the most versatile group of half blind geeks around. I know personally I'm only in my early 20's but have been playing games since I could pick up a controller and I'm having some problems with my hands lately. If I don't use an ergonomic keyboard I'll be in major discomfort for a few days. I've started taking Vioxx as an anti-inflammatory for my right thumb and index finger. I must be overworking these. I don't know about other geeks out there but I get scared about my hands cause these are my livelyhood and how I bring home the $$. I lose a finger or two and I'm SOL. So a message to geeks of tomorrow: Protect the digits at all costs!
    • Spending 8-16 hours on the computer per day, I can relate. I've had to take steps to decrease the wear and tear I've been putting on my hands and eyes. Here's what you can do:

      eyes: My computer manual says to look away from the monitor at something 15 feet away a few times per hour and to take 5 minute breaks. This works. Also, eat a good amount of vitamins A, B2, and C. You'll eyes will love you for it. And before bed, just stare at the ceiling or wall for 10-15 minutes. This works really well for me. Looking at dark colors for a long period of time increases eyesight. Change the desktop to all black. You might want to also invest in an LCD screen. And keep the screen 18-24" away.

      hands: Do whatever it takes to decrease the amount of keystrokes and clicks you do. Make your work more efficient. Make scripts, lots of them, and memorize those keyboard shortcuts! Mac users: set those F-keys to whatever you most frequently use. Most importantly, keep your hands on the keyboard, and don't use the mouse except when it's absolutely necessary, and don't use scroll wheels! Rest your palms when you type. And get a good amount of calcium.

      You might want to invest in a good computer chair and a waterbed. Your back is just as important.

      And you should buy quieter fans for your computer. Less noise means less stress, and all the problems that can cause. Or if you're really wanting to spend a lot of money, get one of those new flatpanel imacs. It's easy on the eyes (Apple flatpanels are some of the best around), you can place the monitor *exactly* where you want it, the keyboard's quiet, the fan is quiet, and it has an ultra efficient user interface.

      Above all, do what's comfortable to you. And be sure to take notice of what's NOT comfortable, and take steps to make it comfortable, or to make it last not as long.

      This might sound like a lot to do, but in the end you'll feel a lot better when you're working, and you'll save a lot of time so you can go home sooner and have fun. The key motto is to work smarter, not harder.

      And if all else fails, get off of the computer.

  • Mutation? (Score:4, Informative)

    by asobala ( 563713 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:01PM (#3216047) Homepage
    They're suggesting people have used thumbs so often that they are more skilled with using thumbs than index fingers. Not a mutation.
    • This is what will happen: Kids who have fast thumbs will excel at computers. Computers are now an important part in human mating rituals. This means that the fast thumbed kids of tommorrow will have more chances at mating, and will breed faster...making this a true genetic mutation. QED
    • They're suggesting people have used thumbs so often that they are more skilled with using thumbs than index fingers. Not a mutation.

      In other words, touch-typing vs. hunt-and-peck. Wow, I'm shocked. Well, I am shocked that presumably intelligent people would a) study this and b) think the conclusion was amazing.
  • by Wizard of OS ( 111213 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:02PM (#3216050)

    In her research, Plant noticed that while those less used to mobile phones used one or several fingers to access the keypad, younger people used both thumbs ambidextrously, barely looking at the keys as they made rapid entries.


    If I play a musical instrument then I don't look at my fingers anymore (either when playing the piano or guitar), does that mean that I have mutated in a musick playing monster? ;-)

    I think the author mixed 'learning' with 'mutating'
  • So much for Evolution being over in humans [slashdot.org]. Seriously, it's adaptation to your surroundings not mutation, it's not like the games are hacking up the poor kids index finger or something.

    Next thing you know we'll start seeing class action lawsuits to Nintendo and Nokia for making devices that are "mutalating" the youth of america.

  • Just because somebody is dextrous with their thumb doesn't mean they are mutated... duh. News for nerds, yeah whatever.
  • A physical mutation would mean a cancerous growth - what I think this is is people's habits being changed as to which finger (or thumb) they use.
    • Umm.. No..
      Every living being on the planet is the product of physical evolution.
      Somehow, I don't think you could call everyone a cancerous growth.. Not unless you were feeling somewhat antisocial.
      • "Somehow, I don't think you could call everyone a cancerous growth.. Not unless you were feeling somewhat antisocial."

        Or were an AI agent trying to piss Morpheus off after tying him to a chair and beating him up.

        graspee

  • Old news (Score:3, Informative)

    by tardibear ( 135254 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:05PM (#3216065)

    See here [google.com] for articles from last year on this topic.

  • Is it merely a change in dexterity caused by practice? Does the Game Boy really cause, in less than one generation, a mutation in "young people"? Or is this more evidence that journalists cannot seem to grasp even the barest essentials of science?
  • by xonos ( 218227 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:08PM (#3216079)
    HEADLINE: People who use their thumbs more are able to use their thumbs better! Scientists are baffeled because of the "geek" tie in. There might be link between this and runners who run alot can run better. News at 11.
  • by YouAreFatMan ( 470882 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:12PM (#3216092) Homepage
    ...people who use their thumbs more often have better coordination with their thumbs.

    Can anyone say "slow news day" ?

    Tomorrow on slashdot:
    "People who type a lot don't even have to look at the keys"
    "Study discovers that engineers better at factoring quadratic equations than grocery clerks"
    "Musicians who practice more often are better musicians"
    • by |<amikaze ( 155975 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @01:01PM (#3216239)
      You can factor a grocery clerk?
      • by kesuki ( 321456 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @01:20PM (#3216292) Journal
        Of course you can factor a grocery clerk. The grocery Clerk factor is perhaps the broadest of the retail clerk factors, since nearly everyone at some time or another must go to a grocery store to purchase food. The grocery clerk factor is a a basic method of calculating how long you'll have to wait in line, based on the time you go to checkout. since this factor can vary greatly, it can impact the entire day, by making you late for each subsequent appointment.
        Based on my local research the worst times to approach a checkout are between 4pm and 8pm.
      • Oh...my...must...catch...breath...someone...mod... up...

        ...whew, that was funny.
  • Violin (Score:2, Funny)

    Yes, and violinists are a bunch of wrist mutants, using their wrist more dexterously than non-violinists.

    In other news, body-building causes physical mutations! Body builders have been observed with muscles far more voluminous than those of non-body builders, a clear case of physical mutations.

    In related news, train track cause physical mutations! Many children living near train tracks have been observed exhibiting a lack of lower apendages! The advance of mechanical transportation having rendered the function of legs as a primary locomotive means useless, the legs of some people are falling off in an incredible example of physical mutations!

    Other mutations in recent history include the apparition of a new human tissue composed of a polymer envelopped filled with either silicon or a saline solution in the region of Los Angeles. These mutations are thought to be cause by the proximity of large amounts of cellulose films used in movie production. The difference in content of these new physical mutations are thought to be two separate evolutionary branches. Scientists expect the saline variant to be the more sucessfull evolutionary track.

  • by evilned ( 146392 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:13PM (#3216097) Homepage
    Back in the NES days I would use my index and middle fingers for the b and a buttons, the genesis controller was designed so I could do the same. But once shoulder buttons started to be on all controllers, from the SNES onwards, I couldnt pull that off. Now that the GBA has shoulder buttons, I cant think of a game system that you can reasonably use all the buttons with out using your thumb as the main button presser
  • Thumbs (Score:2, Informative)

    by jezreel ( 261337 )
    Thumbs are one of the major evolutionary factors that are responsible for the state in which humankind is now.
    The opposing thumb for handling tools, the brain and the upright walk.... So the fact that ppl excessively use their thumbs could be -if you look at it from another perspective- referred to evolution. Though the term 'mutation' is rather wrong here.

    As long as we'll use keyboard we won't end up using just our opposing thumbs :-)
  • Well, as a dozen people have already pointed out, it's not a mutation. I suppose over generations, if the ability to quickly dial their social network members phone #s or impress potential mates with their Nintendo ability, we might see some evolutionary selection for this terrific thumbness, but it's gonna take a while.

    Another, some what related idea: classic video gamers have often speculated about whether young people are now more dexterous with their left hand than they would be otherwise, given the new standard of having the primary joypad or stick be used by the left hand. This started, more or less, with the NES; most other systems were right handed (atari 2600) or ambidexterous (Intellivision, Colecovision, many video games)
  • CmdrTaco writes: "An anonymous reader writes 'Reuters writes: "The use of gadgets such as mobile phones and GameBoys has caused a physical mutation in young people's hands. The use of the thumb is a deviation from the use of the index finger..."'"
  • by coyote-san ( 38515 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @12:36PM (#3216164)
    I know most left-handed individuals feel that many standard tools are awkward to use because of some subtle biases towards the right-handed majority. E.g., think about the standard manual can opener.

    Will the "thumb users" find standard objects equally awkward to use? What about after some thumb-based tools have become widely available (e.g., I could imagine swapping out a standard keyboard for a thumbboard), since that will provide less exposure to finger-based devices?
  • The Lamarckian theory that physical adaptations are mutations (i.e. hereditory) was debunked quite a while ago...

    I'm used to /. running stories that are a bit old, but this is ridiculous!

    Still, I guess I have the excitement of reliving the discovery of DNA on /. to look forward to.
  • If this is a mutation, then by simple
    rules of evolutionary biology, it must mean
    that people who play a lot of video games have a better chance of having offspring!

    This translates to a lot of geeks getting laid!

    I just *knew* my PS2 would get me chicks!
  • Does this mean playing Dance Dance Revolution will mutate me into a skilled martial artist?
  • Its called, building muscle!

    Yes, you can build your muscles anywhere else in your body and its not mutation, body builders build up and they arent called mutants, of course someone who uses their thumbs alittle more than average, has somehow had a genetic mutation and all their childrens thumbs will grow in the same way.

    lol
  • so.... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Emugamer ( 143719 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @01:30PM (#3216309) Homepage Journal
    does this mean the phrase "all thumbs" is now a compliment?
  • stigmata (Score:5, Funny)

    by llamalicious ( 448215 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @01:48PM (#3216349) Journal
    Thank god someone finally went public with this.
    For years now, I've noticed myself using my thumbs for everything: opening doors, eating, picking things up, and almost everything I use my hands for.
    I've hid my hands in shame for so long now, thinking I was a freak. At least now I can take the mittens off... ~sniff~
  • WTWF (World Thumb Wrestling Federation) Announcer: So how does it feel to be thumb of tech-kid of this current generation?

    Hulk Thumb: I am the fastest, meanest, fight'n machine in the world. Thumbs in the old days might have been tougher and suntaned, with their hosts playing outside for amusement... But I, as the top thumb wrestler in this new day, I say that thumbs like me would have beat down all those old thumbs. I mean, during my sparring matches, my host doesn't even autofire! I use one of my moves, the 'Spastic Attack,' to pummel my training partner, Mr. A button.

    WTWF: So are you challenging any and all older thumbs to a match?

    Hulk: Gene, what did I say. I will destroy all comers. I am so agile, so powerful, that no one can avoid my pin.
  • "Nyah, nyah. My thumb is more opposable than yours."
  • I guess this explains why I can't play with any game pad for more than a minute without feeling like my thumb is going to break off. The young'uns have adapted to the abuse.

    'Course, back in my day, I used to get a recurring blister on my right middle finger, thanks to the wear and tear caused by the old Midway joysticks.
  • I would generally call what they're describing "practice." It's not a mutation. Is it a mutation when people who normally bat right handed learn to bat left?
  • by Reziac ( 43301 ) on Sunday March 24, 2002 @02:38PM (#3216573) Homepage Journal
    Ignoring the nonsensical use of "mutation"... I've noticed that little kids use their thumbs like adults use their forefingers. But the current crop of kids are the first generation that grew up with buttons on EVERYTHING, and were introduced to it right out of the crib. How many kids nowadays have ever seen a rotary dial telephone?

    I think it's the natural effect of a transition from gadgets where the forefinger or a thumb-and-fingers grip was the reasonable choice (such as rotary phone dials and rotary controls on TVs, stoves, etc) to gadgets that are button-driven, so any digit will do the job.

    If you watch toddlers, you'll notice they try to press buttons with their thumbs far more often than they try to press them with an index finger. To a toddler, everything is for gripping (not for poking) so the gripping member (the thumb) is the natural choice.

    If you grow up with buttons on every gadget in the house, it's likely that you'll continue to use your thumb, rather than getting retrained to use an index finger (as getting your thumb damnear ripped off by a phone's rotary dial will enforce in a hurry).

    This is no different from the sort of retraining that happens with any interface transition. It just happens to coincide with a physical action that comes more naturally to little kids, hence is easy to continue doing as they grow up.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    The QWERTY keyboard has also changed the priorities humans place on which fingers to use. 200 years ago we held teacups with our thumb and index finger; now we are much more likely to use the middle finger as well. Anybody remember Pac-Man Elbow? 2600 Joystick Blister?
  • It has been discovered that it isnow makes it 30% harder for the youth of today to thumb their nozes at other countries, for the same reason as the above article. Does this mean that gameboys are leading to world peace? Watch tonight at 11 as well reveal the amazing fact that most people who can talk are, in fact, alive!

  • I know this is getting off-topic, but it's something I just wanted to mention. The Original Article [observer.co.uk] for this story makes the quote:

    'The mobile is fast becoming an essential prop in the social life of 20-year-olds,' she said. 'It has even become part of their mating display, with young men trying to impress women with the advanced technology of their phones.'

    Everywhere I look, there are these young guys who hardly can't afford to eat because they spent all their money on clothing, cars, loud stereos, and mobile phones... flashy stuff, in other words. Material posessions to give the impression to the world that they're rich, successful, and smart. Every talk to one of them? They are dumb as rocks. They seem to be slaves to their self-image. And I'm not talking about the occasional paycheck-waster; where I'm currently living, this demographic accounts for something like 80% of the population of 18-25 year old males.

    Given a figure like that, it shouldn't seem so out of the ordinary to me, but it does. Maybe it's because I'm perfectly happy with my '92 Mercury Topaz. Or that I don't feel I need/want a cellphone. Or because I haven't bought a thread of clothing in a year and a half.

    I've attributed much of this to being a mating ritual, but (and I could be wrong here) I don't believe my mating habits are the same as these guys. I don't feel the need to impress anyone, female or otherwise. If they do happen to be impressed with me then great. But I'm not going to make a conscious effort to be attractive. (In my mind, the effort is usually not worth the gain.) It should be noted that I am in fact engaged, though I assume my fiance did not say "yes," due to my sexy Mercury Topaz.
  • The older generation has said for years that the younger generation is all thumbs. This research now proves it.
  • I have big hands and I've noticed that whenever using a gadget I use the ball of my thumb joint to push the buttons. ie, a hard spot at the first knuckle rather than the end of the thumb. It has gotton harder and more pronounced over the years (callused (sp)?) For instance on a camera with buttons on the back, I use the thumb joint to push the button. If I used the thumbtip I would probably mash two buttons by mistake.

    Anybody else use their thumb this way? I haven't really thought about it until reading this story. Maybe I'm just a mutant.

    Also the end of my thumb can bend 90 degrees in either direction.. apparently this isn't common either.

  • One thing - I grew up in the 1980s, using joystick input devices for computer games. I used the stick with my right hand.

    Even keyboard-weenies use the cursor keys, which are usually on the right!

    These days, all the games consoles have joypads, with the directional controller pad on the left.

    In a species where 90% of the population is right-handed, why are joypad d-pads on the left?

    Is it the same reason as those annoying arcade machine joysticks, a cheap-ass way to make the game last a bit longer by making it harder to play for most of the population?

  • There actually IS a phenomenon where organs or limbs which are used more often during growth actually become larger to handle increased demand. It is not, however, evolution, and does not pass to the next generation. Anyone know what it's called?

    I guess that this means that the gamers of today will be the uber-hitchhikers of tomorrow. And furthermore, it makes you pity any kids whose parents talked them out of masturbation...

  • At best this is a learned response. It is definitely NOT a mutation. I suppost "people learn to use thums more" is not as headline grabbing as "video games cause mutation". Junk science and junk journalism.

Suggest you just sit there and wait till life gets easier.

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