Screen Time Might Be Physically Changing Kids' Brains 56
An anonymous reader quotes a report from MIT Technology Review: A study published today in JAMA Pediatrics warns that kids' literacy and language skills suffer with screen use, and MRI scans of their brains appear to back up the findings. Forty-seven 3- to 5-year-olds took a test to measure their cognitive abilities, and their parents were asked to answer a detailed survey about screen time habits. Questions included: How frequently do they use that screen? What type of content are they viewing? And is there an adult sitting with the child talking about what they're watching? The answers were scored against a set of screen time guidelines put out by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The kids also had their brains scanned in an MRI machine.
The scans revealed that kids who spent more time in front of screens had what the authors call lower "white matter integrity." White matter can be roughly thought of as the brain's internal communications network -- its long nerve fibers are sheathed in fatty insulation that allows electrical signals to move from one area of the brain to another without interruption. The integrity of that structure -- how well organized the nerve fibers are, and how well developed the myelin sheath is -- is associated with cognitive function, and it develops as kids learn language. Lead author John Hutton of Cincinnati Children's Hospital told MIT Technology Review there's a clear link between higher screen use and lower white matter integrity in the children his team studied. That structural change appears to be reflected in the results of the cognitive test the kids took as well, which showed high screen time associated with lower levels of language and literacy skills. Signe Lauren Bray, a researcher at the University of Calgary who was not involved in the study, downplays the findings by pointing out that it's a small and preliminary study. "It's absolutely not clear that screen time causes differences in brain development and there are many factors that could explain the association found here," she says.
Regardless, "Caution is warranted," Hutton says. "Children are not small grown-ups, and their needs change with development."
The scans revealed that kids who spent more time in front of screens had what the authors call lower "white matter integrity." White matter can be roughly thought of as the brain's internal communications network -- its long nerve fibers are sheathed in fatty insulation that allows electrical signals to move from one area of the brain to another without interruption. The integrity of that structure -- how well organized the nerve fibers are, and how well developed the myelin sheath is -- is associated with cognitive function, and it develops as kids learn language. Lead author John Hutton of Cincinnati Children's Hospital told MIT Technology Review there's a clear link between higher screen use and lower white matter integrity in the children his team studied. That structural change appears to be reflected in the results of the cognitive test the kids took as well, which showed high screen time associated with lower levels of language and literacy skills. Signe Lauren Bray, a researcher at the University of Calgary who was not involved in the study, downplays the findings by pointing out that it's a small and preliminary study. "It's absolutely not clear that screen time causes differences in brain development and there are many factors that could explain the association found here," she says.
Regardless, "Caution is warranted," Hutton says. "Children are not small grown-ups, and their needs change with development."
Screenagers (Score:2)
Good movie about this.
https://www.screenagersmovie.c... [screenagersmovie.com]
https://www.screenagersmovie.c... [screenagersmovie.com]
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Also good movie about this:
Stare Into The Lights My Pretties [stareintot...es.jore.cc].
Or on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
I am a horrible parent - but thank goodness. (Score:1)
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" he grew up to be a sociopath because he never interacted with another human being after you traded away his sister for another Xbox. And yes, you are one of those parents: when I was his age I didn't even know what an Xbox was"
Truth be told, I have dealt with plenty of human beings who I wish I never had to deal with. People are very over rated, and I'd rather work with machines than people. People get bitchy, machines never do.
And if this makes me a 'sociopath', well la-dee-dah. I don't w
Re: I am a horrible parent - but thank goodness. (Score:1)
In a more serious note, if you had gone a different path with your son, he might have exceeded your expectations differently. Or turned out like his sister, who clearly is yours, judging from your words...
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Closed captioning might make a difference (Score:3)
I had a theory when my daughter was little and I tried it out.
When she does watch TV or videos, the closed captioning is on, showing any spoken word as written text. The volume isn't up very loud - loud enough to hear almost all of what's said, quiet enough that it's sometimes useful to glance at the captions.
Now she's five and she scores better than 96% of her peers on standardized tests of language. She reads well above grade level.
I did not still her with flash cards or anything like that. I did read he
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And here I though it was called the boob tube because of all the scantily clad buxomous young ladies shown on the commercials.
Duh. It's called neurplasticity. (Score:5, Insightful)
Everything changes kids' brains. Adults, too.
Having said that, here's the fMRI research I'm interesting in seeing: Where do people store memories of what they read?
In particular, I suspect that speed readers store a lot of what they read in the visual cortex (with a more associative organization), while readers who vocalize probably store the material in other parts of the brain (with more linear structures). It would also be interesting to compare with readers of ideographic languages (Chinese) and hybrid languages (Japanese) to see how they store and remember books. Webpages and minor stuff would be harder to track, but it should be relatively easy to do fMRIs while talking to people about entire books that they've read.
So far I haven't managed to find or stumble across any such research, though it seems pretty straightforward... Anyone have any hot leads to share?
Re:Duh. It's called neuroplasticity. (Score:2)
Gosh, I hate typos.
If Slashdot only had a financial model that allowed me to nudge in that direction, then allowing for the correction of such slips would be the project most likely to get my small amount of financial nudging. But maybe enough people would agree to make it happen?
And yes, I do Preview. Carefully. Usually two or three times. But the Subject: lines are too easy to overlook. Of course I thought I knew what the subject was.
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Gosh, I hate typos.
If Slashdot only had a financial model that allowed me to nudge in that direction, then allowing for the correction of such slips would be the project most likely to get my small amount of financial nudging. But maybe enough people would agree to make it happen?
And yes, I do Preview. Carefully. Usually two or three times. But the Subject: lines are too easy to overlook. Of course I thought I knew what the subject was.
If they allowed people to edit posts the integrity of conversations and more importantly arguments would be completely lost.
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If they allowed people to edit posts the integrity of conversations and more importantly arguments would be completely lost.
Off topic, but... Not sure there's that much continuity to protect these days, but let me clarify that I'm not advocating for unlimited editing. However I'm not sure of the best solution approach. There are three basic options.
1. Allow deletion (So a corrected version could be reposted.)
2. Correction for some short period (Seems to work well in practice, though I haven't seen the nudge version I'd like.)
3. Editing with a history function. (Some implementations work well.)
I hope we get returned to the neurop
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If they allowed people to edit posts the integrity of conversations and more importantly arguments would be completely lost.
Off topic, but... Not sure there's that much continuity to protect these days, but let me clarify that I'm not advocating for unlimited editing. However I'm not sure of the best solution approach. There are three basic options.
1. Allow deletion (So a corrected version could be reposted.)
2. Correction for some short period (Seems to work well in practice, though I haven't seen the nudge version I'd like.)
3. Editing with a history function. (Some implementations work well.)
I hope we get returned to the neuroplasticity discussion now...
Maybe something along the lines of the effects of repeatedly playing computer games? Recently returned to a Linux game (Backbone) I hadn't played in some years and was surprised how quickly the old circuits were reactivated. I certainly feel the evidence of my brain having been changed...
The only direct applications of neuroplasticity that i am familiar with are those involving traumatic brain injury(TBI) and more specifically rehabilitation after a TBI.
Kids brains are WAY more "plastic" and their outcomes are far greater that those of adults.
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Oh good , a typo :/
also :
1. Allow deletion (So a corrected version could be reposted.)
Could still alter integrity.
2. Correction for some short period (Seems to work well in practice, though I haven't seen the nudge version I'd like.)
Still alter integrity...
3. Editing with a history function. (Some implementations work well.)
Maybe
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Duh. It's called neuroplasticity. Everything changes kids' brains. Adults, too.
I don't think the research warrants a "duh". The research says that screen-time is associated with (1) changes in brain structure, (2) decreased language and literacy skills. You might have reasonably expected screen-time to increase language skills e.g. if the children are exposed to vastly more words spoken by characters on TV than they would be if left playing more on their own.
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You're right as regards the substance of the research. My "Duh" was mostly in response to the headline, but even Slashdot seems to be suffering from clickbait fever these years.
The body of my post is focused on the question of memory, which is related and interests me more than the focus of the reported research. I remember (or have conflated memories of) times when helpful people on Slashdot would pop up with the latest research on such topics. I feel like I'm lagging farther and farther behind these days
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Does Slashdot need more neuroplasticity? (Score:2)
Well, I wish I had a nice mod point for you, but I think it would be on the "We agree" dimension, which shouldn't count for much...
However, your UID raises a timing question. My own usage of Slashdot had a long break, but I was able to keep my identity. Perhaps you rejoined with a fresh ID at some point? Or did the transition start later than I thought, perhaps during my absence? (At this late date I only have a vague memory of getting disgusted with Slashdot at some point, but it might have been a minor in
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This one is interesting. I remember reading of an experiment done on a patient undergoing brain surgery. The patient was awake because no anesthesia is needed since there are no pain receptors in the brain. When they stimulated a certain section of his brain, he reported hearing music. When they stopped stimulating it, the music stopped. But when they stimulated it again, he heard the music
Ha! Fishing for conclusions. (Score:2)
There's been articles on this as long as I've been alive.
"TV ROTS YOUR BRAIN" has always been an shibboleth - just as it was with radio before it. Plenty of very serious studies with limited results and big conclusions tied to them.
Yes - the brains of the young are different from being given different inputs. Some difference in focus, when you average across a lot.
But the Flynn Effect has also been working all this time. That is, every generation has more or less been 5% improved on just about any more-o
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A friend of mine that teaches elementary school wanted to do a research paper on reading skills for those kids that had a family computer vs those that don't back before smart phones. He had noticed that the kids who had a family computer did better in his classes
At the time I told him the results would be skewed because those with a family computer where more financially secure and often had a stay at home parent. He came back to me a few months later, after parent teacher conferences and confirmed that wa
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Freakonomics did a review of what affects school performance. Here is roughly what they found:
Things that don't matter much: What parents do.
Things that matter very much: Who parents are.
If your mom reads to you every day, that doesn't help much.
If your mom has an IQ of 130 and a high income, the kid will likely do well.
The economist's guide to parenting [freakonomics.com]
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If your mom reads to you every day, that doesn't help much.
Of course it doesn't.... If she teaches you to read and do math then it helps.
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If she teaches you to read and do math then it helps.
Far less than you think. Smart kids will pick up the skills anyway. Dumb kids will fall behind no matter what their parents do.
DNA is not destiny: Pre-natal nutrition is also important.
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A leg up is a leg up whether you eventually fail or succeed.
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What if she makes you read to her instead?
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Here's the thing though - none of this might actually be *bad* for a kid!
Honestly - at least when I was a kid, I was a complete sponge for input. That's what that intense feeling of 'boring' feeds from - it's kind of painful to be stuck in place with less info that you could be drawing from.
And you know what - waiting for other people to make decisions on everything is crazy slow. I know I was drawn to fast paced information sources - like computers and BBSs of the day, just because I could have a larger
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I've read other studies with better designs that have looked at learning and reading comprehension on screens as opposed to other forms of media like books or print outs that have found worse results from screens, though the reason for the effect is not well understood
Presumably that "not well understood" is precisely the importance of this study. It's telling future researches that a fruitful place to investigate - for a plausible mechanism behind the effect you mention - is the myelination and micro-organization of white matter.
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"TV ROTS YOUR BRAIN" has always been an shibboleth - just as it was with radio before it. Plenty of very serious studies with limited results and big conclusions tied to them."
At one time, BOOKS were the thing that was rotting people's brains and detrimental to society. and I am not talking about comic books, but ordinary text only books.
These "$CURRENT_POPULAR_MEDIA is bad for you" buffoons were always full of shit, and they are just spouting because they want to feel important and they love hearin
Doesn't EVERYTHING... (Score:3)
physically change kids brains? It's that one of the main parts about "growing up" and brain devolopment?
TBI: True but Irrelevant (Score:2)
The question is not whether it changes the brain but how it changes the brain. And not "what current skills are we losing" but instead what new skills we are gaining.
How many of you know how to knap flint, obsidian or chert into stone tools? How to recognize edible plants? How to ride a horse? How to use a sword?
The skills of yesterday fade away as we use our brains to learn new things, things more relevant to the modern world.
Of course extensive use of new tools will develop new skills. Of course it w
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I had similar complaints about being a "wool-gatherer" who read books too much 50+ years ago. Probably did change my brain, now I'm making 3X what they did scaled for inflation.
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Apparently I'm older than you think I am.
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I grew up in the mid-west, so I know how to do most of those things and much more. I seriously doubt I would if I had lived in a large city. The farmers and ranchers still have and teach those skills to their kids and they aren't going away anytime soon because the modern world still needs to eat.
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Skills are one thing, but what about the fact that nothing has physical buttons anymore? I have to wonder if some tactile-connected brain regions are atrophying since everything feels the same -- except for a remote control, mouse, and keyboard -- when anyone interacts with media nowadays.
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Yes, kids today will never know the experience of unwinding audio tape that got itself wrapped around the capstan and/or the pinch roller, and taking care (and praying) that they don't ruin that Metallica cassette tape that they spent half their week's allowance on. No wonder their minds are rotting.
Good or bad? (Score:2, Insightful)
Any mentally engaging activity is likely to change brain structure given enough time, but whether that change is beneficial or detrimental seems to remain a mystery.
If your child was obsessed with making stuff with Lego no doubt there would be a discernible change there too. An inclination towards engineering, who knows?
But, we perceive screen time as bad and therefore interpret any brain adaptation as bad too, but perhaps there is some later life benefit?
(Personally I doubt it, I think screen time is a th
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Any mentally engaging activity is likely to change brain structure given enough time, but whether that change is beneficial or detrimental seems to remain a mystery.
A mystery? The research specifically says that it's associated with a decrease in literacy and language ability. That seems like a straightforward detriment.
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Games are melting kid's brains!!!! (Score:2)
That is essentially the claim here. Sounds like ye old moral panic in full swing.
Yeah, screen bad (Score:2)
They should go back to wholesome and healthy gang banging, tagging, and shoplifting. Ever since gaming and computer use skyrocketed around 1995 or so, teens have been spending more time in front of those screens instead of doing the aforementioned activities, and things have really gone down hill since then.
Correlation != causation (Score:2)
Basically, the problem isn't screen time. It's the fact no-one talks to each other any more.
oh great another exuse (Score:1)