Study "Strongly" Links Gaming With Kids' Poor Attention Spans

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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Study "Strongly" Links Gaming With Kids' Poor Attention Spans



A new study suggests that there is a connection between a child's fondness for videogames and their inability to pay attention to things that aren't gaming.

Parents being concerned over their kids' gaming habits is hardly news, whether they're worried that the games will kill them [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/90009-Sony-Considering-Legal-Action-Over-Change4Life-Ad], make them violent maniacs, or just make them fatsos. However, according to a study, parents can now worry that videogames are draining their kids' attention spans just as much as the boob tube is.

According to the study published in the Official Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics (available in .PDF form here [http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/reprint/peds.2009-1508v1]), a survey of 1,323 elementary school students conducted over more than a year found that the gamers were more likely to have attention problems. Children who played games for two hours or more a day were 67% more likely to have attention problems like Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, whether at home or at school.

This is not just limited to gaming - studies on TV have returned similar numbers for children who spend all day watching Spongebob or whatever the hot new cartoon property is these days. One hypothesis posited by the report is that the often rich and imaginative worlds in games and TV shows draw the kids' attention away from reality, making it difficult to concentrate. Another theory suggests that frequent and rapid subject changes in TV and games make it harder for children to focus for long periods of time on things that aren't as inherently interesting.

However, as the researchers in question have actually studied statistics, the report is careful to note that this only implies correlation, not causation - there is no evidence suggesting gaming and TV causes ADHD. Iowa State University doctoral candidate Edward Swing, the lead author of the study, told CNN [http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/07/05/games.attention/index.html?iref=allsearch] that the only thing that the study could definitively conclude was that there was some relationship between the two: "It wouldn't surprise me if children who have attention problems are attracted to these media, and that these media increase the attention problems."

As noted by the researchers, gaming itself often requires a high degree of focus and concentration - you won't beat Halo 3 on Legendary by getting bored and going to ride a bike, after all.

However, given that a similar, simultaneous study of college students showed that attention problems in gamers and avid TV watchers were just as high, if not higher, researchers believe that a steady diet of flashy media may exacerbate an existing problem. The study recommends that parents limit their kids' interaction with videogames and TV to under two hours a day, just in case - which honestly, seems more like plain common sense to me.

(Via Gamasutra [http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/29294/Study_Kids_Gaming_Is_Strongly_Associated_With_Attention_Problems.php?])

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ProfessorLayton

Elite Member
Nov 6, 2008
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Also, every single one of those kids has breathed in air at some point. Studies also show that the more athletic children tend to be linked with having played a sport at some time.
 

Baby Tea

Just Ask Frankie
Sep 18, 2008
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What??
Kids are bored by things that aren't as fun or interesting as video games or TV?
Geez, this was a well-conducted study!

Why won't Billy do his homework? Long division is just as hip and rad as Mario!
Sheesh.

I do agree with the two-hour limit, though!
That's why I'm glad I'll be a gamer parent. I'll be making use of the parental controls.
 

The_Deleted

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Aug 28, 2008
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Another time consuming waste of effort. Of course kids are going to be more interested in moving, flashing images than a static environment.
Let's not forget that an attention span is different for every one, be it due to varying degrees of ADD, hearing problems or just not giving the single slightest toss about the subject being discussed.
Young children should only be allowed 2 hours a TV day... but in all honesty... so should everyone.
 
May 28, 2009
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ProfessorLayton said:
Also, every single one of those kids has breathed in air at some point. Studies also show that the more athletic children tend to be linked with having played a sport at some time.
However, new studies have completely contradicted your studies.

Literally, this is what continually happens. Other studies will prove this one wrong, then counter-studies will prove those wrong yet again, and the cycle of studies continues...

Whoever undertakes these studies really should be doing something important. Are they sociologists or psychologists? *Chortlechortlechortle*

Yeah, I do enjoy jokes about those professions.
 

Kajin

This Title Will Be Gone Soon
Apr 13, 2008
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ADHD or not, people tend to pay attention to things that interest them far longer than things that don't interest them. The other day in class I was actively listening and participating in a discussion I found interesting, but as soon as the discussion was over it was back to zoning out and skimming through the textbook and not paying a single bit of attention to the lecture at hand.

Seriously, what would you rather do? Something fun (games) or something tedious (homework)?
 

Dr. wonderful

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Dec 31, 2009
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I call shenanigans.

If it isn't gaming, it's tv. If it isn't tv, It's radio. If it and so on.
Personally, childdren just want to have fun.

What about the parents who text a lot?
 

Woodsey

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Aug 9, 2009
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You mean to tell me that people can't pay attention for very long to things they're not interested in?

Why, this is unheard of!

Next up: taking a shit may make your arse hole dirty if you don't wipe afterwards!
 

Booze Zombie

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Dec 8, 2007
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I think the issue is that kids want to pay attention to what they want to pay attention to, not some test, so maybe these tests are inherently incorrect?
 

Vaccine

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Feb 13, 2010
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I can focus on anything outside of gaming I enjoy very well.

"Holy atari 2600 batman!, kids getting bored of school, is this normal?"
"I'm Batman. >:["
"Ehhhhhhhhh, where's the Joker when you need him..."
 

Gethsemani_v1legacy

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Oct 1, 2009
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Being distracted and having ADD/ADHD are two totally different things. One is a common problem, the other is a diagonsis of a personality disorder. That people with ADHD find it easier to focus on media like TV or Video Games is nothing new but does it explain the signficantly higher prevalence of ADHD in those that play plenty of Video Games?

Personally, I think there might be a causation between sitting infront of Video Games/TV a lot and being diagnosed with ADHD. At any rate, it shouldn't be dismissed too easily.
 
Feb 13, 2008
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Correlation doesn't prove Causation. Especially when the correlation may be the other way around.

And hell, who among us wasn't a hyperactive child? Especially if we're told to sit still so someone can study us.
 

tomtom94

aka "Who?"
May 11, 2009
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This is completely untr- ooh shiny!
In all seriousness, I'm for once actually not surprised. Kids just want to have fun.