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Study: Limiting screen use beneficial

By Hamza Shaban, The Washington Post
Published: September 30, 2018, 6:09am

Parents who possess the courage to separate their children from their smartphones may be helping their kids’ brainpower, a new study suggests.

Children who use smartphones and other devices in their free time for fewer than two hours a day performed better on cognitive tests assessing their thinking, language, and memory, according to a study published Wednesday in the Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.

The study assessed the behavior of 4,500 children, ages 8 to 11, by looking at their sleep schedules, how much time they spent on screens and their amount of exercise, and analyzed how those factors impacted the children’s mental abilities.

The researchers compared the results with national guidelines for children’s health. The guidelines recommend that children in that age group get at least an hour of physical activity, no more than two hours of recreational screen time and nine to 11 hours of sleep per night.

The researchers found that only 5 percent of children met all three recommendations. Sixty-three percent of children spent more than two hours a day staring at screens, failing to meet the screen-time limit.

Children who failed to meet all three criteria performed worse on thinking, language and memory tests than kids that met the recommendations, according to the study. But reduced screen time was positively linked to superior mental performance, the study found.

“We need to pay attention to how long we are on the screens for,” Jeremy Walsh, a post doctoral fellow at the University of British Columbia and the lead author of the study, said. “This study is showing that less than two hours of recreational screen time is beneficial for children.”

“These findings highlight the importance of limiting recreational screen time and encouraging healthy sleep to improve cognition in children,” the study’s authors wrote.

The findings arrive as technology companies take steps to address worries over increased device use. In recent months calls from parents, consumers and technologists have elevated a conversation about young people and concerns about tech addiction and whether device use could harm childhood development. Apple recently released advanced parental controls and unveiled a new control system that lets users monitor how much they’re using their iPhone. Google has also introduced new features to limit screen time and monitor use on Android devices.

The study’s authors said that more research is needed to probe the links between screen time and cognition.

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