Well, that's not surprising.
Quote:
Researchers worry that constant digital stimulation like this creates attention problems for children with brains that are still developing, who already struggle to set priorities and resist impulses.
I wouldn't doubt that. It's not at all unlikely that the only reason I still have the ability to concentrate on one thing for hours at a time, oftentimes so intently that I forget to eat, and enjoy reading for long periods of time etc. is that rather than spending my days playing on the computer and with game consoles (like my younger brothers do now), I spent them finishing school by 11:00 in the morning to play outside the rest of the day with my cousins that were at my house almost every day and my neighbors, all of whom were also homeschooled... When I was inside, I'd either play with Star Wars guys, read, or, yeah, play the Super Nintendo or N64, but until I was ten we had twenty-minute limits (that's also when we got our first computer; sorry to anyone I just made feel old

). It sort of reminds me of information from another study that determined that 98% of 10-year-olds in 1998 are more physically fit than the
average 10-year-old in 2008.
I've seen the constant need for technology in almost everyone I know. When I'm at home, I'm on the internet probably a good eight hours a day on days I don't work, due to lack of friends in the area plus the ability to converse with the friends I have that is provided. If I'm not on the internet, I'm reading, typically.
Quote:
Mr. Nass at Stanford thinks the ultimate risk of heavy technology use is that it diminishes empathy by limiting how much people engage with one another, even in the same room.
“The way we become more human is by paying attention to each other,” he said. “It shows how much you care.”
That empathy, Mr. Nass said, is essential to the human condition. “We are at an inflection point,” he said. “A significant fraction of people’s experiences are now fragmented.”
And that reminded me of another few studies showing that this generation, mine, is the least empathetic one yet of the past fifty years or so. This is the first generation to grow up with this kind of technology; I wouldn't say that I did, not in my childhood at least (we've always been behind haha; we didn't have cable until I was fifteen, for example), but the generation as a whole absolutely did.
etc. lol