Investigating screentime

Screen time

I go through phases in which I read and write about specific topics. A recent interest has been screen time. While this topic has been an area of investigation for some time, often associated with childhood obesity, my interest is more related to learning capacity and the potential consequences of the technology gifts we give our grandchildren. My wife and I are obviously technology advocates and we take seriously considering both the potential positive and negative consequences of technology tools. 

For example:

“Observational studies in humans have linked exposure to fast-paced television in the first 3 years of life with subsequent attentional deficits in later childhood.” (source is included at a later point)

Research on certain topics is more difficult than many not involved might think. This is one of the things you learn in taking a course in introductory psychology. The basic problem is the control of all potential independent variables when investigating variables that are hypothesized to have negative consequences. Simply put – you don’t do what you think may harm people to people just to see what happens. What you do instead is to try to find situations that may offer information without intervening. So, if you are interested in violent video games, you search for individuals who spend a lot of time playing such games and compare these individuals with people who do not. If you are concerned that young children become more distractable when given control of technology devices, you find young kids who seem to enjoy such activities and contrast them with children not involved in such activities. When observation rather than intervention is the approach to research, you often are told that correlation is not causality. This is a way of explaining that variables you have not controlled may be the actual cause of the consequence you observe. Just to be fair, this may not be the case and the variable of interest is responsible. You just don’t know for sure. This is why scientists interested in these topics keep trying to find different ways to approach key questions and argue a lot as to what findings produced might mean. In many ways, scientists who study human behavior have obstacles scientists investigating many other areas do not face.

One alternative to the ethical issue in subjecting humans to potentially damaging independent variables is to conduct studies with animals. Animal research is common in the field of medicine and sometimes to investigate issues of interest to psychologists.

For example, intro psychology textbooks often describe a famous study comparing mice raised in an enriched or deprived environment demonstrating advantages in brain development for the enriched environment. This research is argued to be relevant to the importance of early stimulation for infants.

Overstimulation of mice can also be produced and one technique is described in the following paragraph. To me, this sounds like a torture technique I find described in some of the espionage fiction I read. 

“Speakers, connected to a precision amplification device, were mounted above standard mouse cages, and colored lights were positioned at all four walls. Audio from the “cartoon channel” was piped into the mouse cage at 70 dB. This level is typical for television watching and well below the 100–115 dB that are typically used for acoustic stress models in rodents (117118). A photorhythmic modulator was used to change colors and intensities in concordance with the audio, thereby simulating television that cannot be avoided (e.g., flashing lights on all four sides of the cage).”

These researchers find that the hyperstimulated mice suffered negative neurological consequences the researchers compared to ADHD

I do think research in this area is important because it does seem to me that the use of technology devices would be among the possible experiences capable of causing brain changes through brain plasticity. It is important to note that plasticity is adaptive to large amounts of stimulation and this adaption is a built in opportunity for the brain to move beyond genetic dispositions. This does not mean that the adaptations cannot have negative consequences. 

I cannot help trying imagine being in that mouse cage and being exposed to the stimulation I have no way to control. Is this analog what young children sitting on the couch watching cartoons or playing with an app on an iPad experience? My immediate reaction would be that even animal researchers should offer a method of control (press the bar to turn on and off) to more accurately approximate what a two-year old experiences. If the two-year old is not engaged, he/she can wander off to the kitchen or try another app.

The link I offer provides access to the study I summarize. Interested parties may find the introduction as valuable as the argument for this animal study. 

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Sugarman

Sugarman is a song by Sixto Rodriguez describing the dependence on a drug dealer. Rodriguez is the central feature in an interesting focus of a documentary titled Waiting for Sugarman about Rodriguez’s life as a two-album sensation and worth your time. He was not an addict, but wrote songs about the disadvantages.

I happened to think of Rodriguez’s song when I decided to write about the topic of watching a local television news story on electronic screen syndrome. We have supplied our grandkids with devices and some would argue that we are encouraging the development of destructive habits.

I would like to think I follow the science on issues such as the impact of screen time. This is an important issue on which I have a personal opinion, but I know that others take a completely opposite view. I can make the case that even young children can use technology in an active way. My young granddaughter handles an iPad with ease, problem solves when something does not go as she expects, and here is adding farm animals to a barnyard scene. However, some argue that staring at a screen whether involved actively or not, can have adverse affects on brain development. If you can point me to research publications, I would appreciate the chance to read the studies. 

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The demise of Google+

Google announced today that it is sunsetting Google+. I thought Google+ had great potential as a social media alternative to Facebook, but it never seemed to gain traction. The feature I thought was most valuable was the opportunity to define circles of individuals as a way to control who would be able to see specific content you created. It made sense to me that it made sense to share different content with friends, family, or the general public. I recently learned that this idea was not originally Google’s but was based on the open source Diaspora project and what this venture described as aspects

Google used privacy concerns related to breaches as justification, but it was clear that the service was simply not generating much activity.

Looking back at Google+

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Ads and trackers

Since I have been using the Brave browser, I have become more interesting in the frequency at which ads and trackers appear on web sites. 

I have found ads and trackers on sites I would not expect to need to include these cookies. For example, I example I was reading this ISTE page on digital equity and I noticed that the page contained 5 ads or trackers. I understand many of the reasons for the inclusion of these add-ons to content. The page you are viewing includes a Google ad. I make no money unless you click on this ad, but the inclusion of such ads allows me to raise a little money I can use to pay for my server expenses. Cookies can be set on a computer to remember the login information of a user so the user does not have to reenter this information each time a user needs to have access. Why would an organization like ISTE need to set cookies? There would be no reason to login to modify the content of the page. Adding a comment requires a login, but this information is not carried over from page to page. 

I do see that ISTE accepts ad revenue (I see an ad from Central Michigan on a version of the page with ads). 

Ghostery cookie identification

I used another service to try to identify the specific add-ons and I came up with a different number some of which I could not identify.

How you react to such information is up to you, but I do think it informative to be aware of how you are being tracked online and to understand it can be sites you would not necessarily see such tracking as necessary.

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Anyone can create


Apple has just released new iPad focused curriculum guides focused on encouraging student creativity. The guides which focus on music, photography, video, and drawing include project ideas and app tutorials. Apple has also released a related teacher’s guide.




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Facebook breach

If you are a Facebook user, it would probably be wise to change your password because of the recent Facebook breach – 90 million users information was supposedly vulnerable. This breach is of particular concern because:

Many individuals use the same password for multiple services

Some use Facebook as a way to authenticate access to other services.

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