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How video gaming could be good for you

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Pop star Rihanna gaming on an Xbox. (Image: flickr user: gamerscoreblog (cc: by-sa))

A host of new studies show that video gaming might actually improve visual skills and increase brain capacity.


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The following is a partial transcript; for full story, listen to audio

Turn off the computer and go outside and play! We've all heard the conventional wisdom that says video games will turn your brain to mush. But a host of new studies show that gaming might actually be good for your health.

Researchers at Nottingham University found that playing certain video games could achieve in one hour what eye patches achieve in 400 hours; while researchers at the University of Rochester found that first-person shooter video games improve visual skills by increasing the brain’s capacity to spread attention over a wide range of events.

But wait, there's more! The Mind Research Network in Albuquerque, N.M., found that Tetris players developed a thicker cortex than those who didn’t play.  And the Nintendo Wii has been helping Parkinson's patients improve balance. So, are video games good for you?

Baratunde Thurston, host of "Popular Science's Future Of," a TV show on the Science Channel, says video gaming has more positive effects than you might think.

He says the research shows that there are several benefits to video gaming. "There's the social; There's a new sort of storytelling format, and the way of interacting with other people. It's a mental workout. It's fun, and there's also the ability to destroy things," said Thurston.

Technology writer Clive Thompson, the blogger for Collision Detection and a frequent contributor to "Wired" and "The New York Times," says some of the studies support the mental workout that players can get from the games.

"There's been studies that show for example, if you play Tetris a lot, it increases the white matter in your brain. And the more white matter in your brain, the more efficient you are at doing certain types of thinking.

"And there's been other studies that show surgeons -- laparoscopic surgeons  -- if they play video games before they do surgery, they actually have almost 40 percent fewer errors. I's sort of getting their hand-eye coordination up to speed before they do a delicate task like that."

When gaming involves multiple players, it encourages both teamwork and individual effort.

"It's a little society and you learn to be a member of a society with the values and reputation and cost that goes with it," said Thurston.

The idea that gaming might improve certain skills shouldn't be too surprising, since pilots and astronauts have long been trained in video simulators.

"The idea that games could affect your behavior is intuitive because all sorts of areas have used them to train people in doing things quickly, said Thompson. "The thing that's really interesting is that the research has started to branch out to look at these unexpected ways that games might be good to you.

"There's a piece  [of research] that came out earlier this year that completely fascinated me, which was the idea that you could us Tetris to treat post-tramatic stress syndrome. Now people think that PTSD as something that happens if you go to Iraq, but it most often happens if you've had a car accident. And what they discovered was if you get someone to play Tetris for 45 minutes or so after a car accident, it might seriously decrease the amounts of flashbacks they have. Essentially it occupies the visual cortex so much that you don't take all those flashbacks images of being in a car accident and read them into your brain as well."

But, Thompson says, there is still that side to gaming that isn't so positive. "Video games are designed to be very addictive. People pay tens of millions of dollars to make these things as addictive as possible. So it's absolutely true that the great danger with them is you'd rather play them than eat."

"The Takeaway" is a national morning news program, delivering the news and analysis you need to catch up, start your day, and prepare for what’s ahead. The show is a co-production of WNYC and PRI, in editorial collaboration with the BBC, The New York Times Radio, and WGBH.

More at thetakeaway.org

Found in:   The Takeaway   John Hockenberry   Celeste Headlee   technology
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Subscribe to comments feed Comments (9 posted)

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adam wakrim 14 November, 2011 08:09:58
u guys are wrong, im 10 years old and dont think im to young and i play alot of video games and my science fair project is on video game addiction and i was in a car accident 2 monthes and i want to yell at that person.

and i bet people want to now who to sue.

adam
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Kyler 28 November, 2011 10:22:42
What does your car accident have to do with anything? I'm deeply sorry, its a tragedy. But I am a hardcore gamer with many years of video game experience. The author of this selection couldn't have stated it any better. When I play video games I feel like I am apart of a team that loves the game just as much as you. Fantastic piece guys, this helped on my school project as well. Got an A. :)
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Jasmine 06 December, 2011 10:37:28
This totally helped me out for my essay and Great Article Thanks :)
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nate 07 December, 2011 11:14:35
this helps alot with my school project reportage essay as well on the benefits of videogames and to the 10 year old please dont comment on things you dont know because i could pull a 5th grade science fair project out of my butt right now and get an A they require pretty much 0 research
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Chad 15 December, 2011 07:18:11
Thank you for this article. It helps me prove to a few friends that they really are good for you. I don't see how a car accident ha an affect on this topic unless you thought you could drive at ten and stole a car, but I'm not saying that is the case. I digress, this again is a fantastic article and it is going to help me on my research paper, Thanks.
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Azlan 23 December, 2011 04:17:10
Gaming will remain sad. It ruins families and distracts the world from the true meaning of life. Sport brings so much better hand-eye co ordination and is much better socially. A pointless article to make sad gamers feel better about themselves.
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Chris 09 January, 2012 08:20:37
Really? You have nothing better to do than to be a troll on the internet? Why did you even look at this article if your so anti-gaming, shouldnt you be outside playing sports? Oh wait its cold outisde and snowing? Oh okay.
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Fred 20 January, 2012 01:31:07
this really helped me write my essay
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jake 25 January, 2012 11:58:14
video games are not bad for the mind to be honest ratings show that if a kid starts playing video games young they will see what the future is like ahead of them if you say video games leads to violence thats for the special needed kids cause to them all electronics messes with there brain functions but a human bean needs to know whats real and whats fake no matter how old you are and if you cant see the difference between real life and fake then you do not deserve to play video games
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