You Must Control The Television that Your Children Consume or It Will Consume Them
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SOME CHILDREN'S TV SHOWS
ARE BAD FOR THEIR BRAINS
September 12, 2011
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends limited television for children - and
discourages it altogether for children under age 2. A new study in the
October, 2011, issue of the journal, Pediatrics, finds that some TV
shows may be worse than others. The study, "The Immediate Impact of
Different Types of Television on Young Children's Executive Function,"
published online Sept. 12, tested 4-year-old children's attention,
problem solving, self regulation and other executive function abilities
after they watched one of two cartoons for nine minutes.
A control group of children received crayons and markers for free
drawing for the same time period. The children who watched a fast-paced
cartoon featuring an animated kitchen sponge did significantly worse on
tests than the drawing group. There was no difference between the
drawing group and children who watched a slower-paced, realistic Public
Broadcasting Service cartoon about a typical preschool boy.
Study authors stated they cannot tell which features of the TV show
created the effects, though they speculate the combination of
fantastical events and the fast pacing are responsible. They conclude
that parents should be aware that watching similar television shows may
immediately impair young children's executive function. In a commentary,
"The Effects of Fast-Paced Cartoons," pediatrician and researcher
Dimitri Christakis, MD, FAAP, discusses the study and the implications
that media exposure has for children's health.
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Wednesday, September 21, 2011
You Must Control The Television that Your Children Consume or It Will Consume Them
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discourages it altogether for children under age 2. A new study in the
October, 2011, issue of the journal, Pediatrics, finds that some TV
shows may be worse than others. The study, "The Immediate Impact of
Different Types of Television on Young Children's Executive Function,"
published online Sept. 12, tested 4-year-old children's attention,
problem solving, self regulation and other executive function abilities
after they watched one of two cartoons for nine minutes.
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