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Screen Time Changes Structure of Kids' Brains, NIH Study Shows (bloombergquint.com) 94

schwit1 shared this article from Bloomberg: Brain scans of adolescents who are heavy users of smartphones, tablets and video games look different from those of less active screen users, preliminary results from an ongoing study funded by the National Institutes of Health show, according to a report on Sunday by "60 Minutes." That's the finding of the first batch of scans of 4,500 nine- to 10-year-olds. Scientists will follow those children and thousands more for a decade to see how childhood experiences, including the use of digital devices, affect their brains, emotional development and mental health.

In the first round of testing, the scans of children who reported daily screen usage of more than seven hours showed premature thinning of the brain cortex, the outermost layer that processes information from the physical world.... Early results from the $300 million study, called Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD), have determined that children who spend more than two hours of daily screen time score lower on thinking and language tests. A major data release is scheduled for early 2019.

The study's director cautions that "It won't be until we follow them over time that we will see if there are outcomes that are associated with the differences that we're seeing in this single snapshot."

The study will ultimately follow over 11,000 nine- to 10-year-olds for a decade.
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Screen Time Changes Structure of Kids' Brains, NIH Study Shows

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  • Open data (Score:4, Interesting)

    by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Saturday December 15, 2018 @12:48PM (#57808526)

    The entire dataset (~50TB) is open to search and download right now. There will be bi-yearly releases of both MR and psychological testing, a great starter set for those willing to have their hand at Big Data analysis.

  • control group ? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Saturday December 15, 2018 @01:04PM (#57808584)

    These studies usually require a control group that represents those who do not have the distinguishing features of those being studied. In this case, young people who aren't exposed to screen time. Where will these people be found? In the Amazon jungles? And how can they objectively used as a control group? If there is a significant difference in the economic / geographical / ethnic / etc status of the control group, the study can't be valid.

    • Many parents limit their kids' access to phones and computers. Some parents don't allow their kids access at all.

      The problem is that these people are likely not "typical". They are likely higher income, higher IQ, and more involved in their kids education in other ways, such as encouraging reading books.

      This could just be a case of C != C.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        We were very poor growing up. I was limited to 2 hours of 'electronics' use a day. Be it video games/television or computer time (We finally got a family computer when I was in the 6th grade and everyone had to take turns). I was allowed to earn more time by going above and beyond my typical household chores. I had to do the dishes every day, mow the lawn, shovel the typical stuff kids do to help out. But if I detailed my parents car, or did extra housework I would earn chunks of time I could bank and then

    • by synth7 ( 311220 )

      Oh, I don't know, try the Amish, or the Hutterites, and perhaps even Mormons who don't want their kid's brains full of deviltry. There are plenty of sub-groups within the USA that don't shove a screen into their kid's hands every times they cry because they're bored.

    • These studies usually require a control group that represents those who do not have the distinguishing features of those being studied. In this case, young people who aren't exposed to screen time. Where will these people be found? In the Amazon jungles? And how can they objectively used as a control group? If there is a significant difference in the economic / geographical / ethnic / etc status of the control group, the study can't be valid.

      All social science faces that problem. You do your best.

      Anyway, there are certainly parents who, while otherwise part of modern society, significantly restrict their kids from screens, to greater or lesser degrees.

  • And had it been possible to do such studies at the time I think we would have found that use of television changes the structure of the human brain, long periods talking on the telephone to people who would previously have been inaccessible more than once/twice in a lifetime changes the structure of the human brain, reading changes the structure of the human brain, riding a horse changes the structure of the human brain, learning how to build a fire and being up awake at night staring into it changes the st

  • "In the first round of testing, the scans of children who reported daily screen usage of more than seven hours showed premature thinning of the brain cortex, the outermost layer that processes information from the physical world."

    That is a ton of screen time, especially for kids that should be in school most of the day.

  • Where are all of the people that complained about kids reading comic books instead of the 'classics' years ago?

    Al least your kid was reading.

    Yes, I really despise this type of people. Probably because I read comic books.

    I'm going to buy your kid a toy gun, a drum, and some pick-up sticks for christmas. Maybe some glitter too.

     

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