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Technology harm heath

Published by jessiejhon310, 2021-11-18 11:52:27

Description: I research on this topic for more than a year that helps me to reach a good result and I do find some clues for proving that technology effect mental health and physical health too.

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Because of the concern that a young, developing brain may be particularly susceptible to chronic exposure to computers, smartphones, tablets, or television, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that parents be 2 years of age or younger. Limit screen time for children of, when the brain is bad. Especially bad. 10 Spending more time with digital media means spending less time talking face to face. Crush and Mount 12 explored the hypothesis that playing video games would interfere with the ability to recognize emotions expressed through facial expressions. They examined the effects of playing video games on facial expressions recognition in 197 students (ages 17 to 23). Participants played violent video games before watching a series of calm faces that turned into angry or happy faces. Participants were asked to identify emotions immediately when facial expressions changed. The authors found that happy faces are identified more quickly than angry faces, and that playing violent video games delays facial recognition.Our team at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) 13 speculated that children with screen-based media restrictions would have more opportunities to communicate face-to-face, recognizing their nonverbal emotional and social gestures. Improve capacity. We studied 51 schoolchildren who spent five days in an overnight nature camp where televisions, computers and smartphones were banned, and compared them to 54 similar school-based controls who practiced their usual media practice. Continue (4 hours screen time per day).You can also read more detail on it(https://www.poundit.com/). At baseline and after 5 days, participants were tested for their ability to recognize emotions from facial expressions and videotaped scenes of social interactions (without verbal cues).After 5 days, the participants of the Nature Camp limited to screen time showed significantly better recognition of non-verbal emotional and social cues than the participants who continued their normal daily screen time. These findings show that time away from screen-based media and digital communication tools improves both emotional and social intelligence.


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