mindpotion Blog
Friday, 24 January 2014
Television damages brain structure of children
Mood:  d'oh
Topic: Television


Watching too much television can actually cause harmful changes to a child's brain structure, according to a study conducted by researchers from Tohoku University in Japan and published in the journal Cerebral Cortex. The more television watched, the more severe the changes.

"TV viewing is directly or indirectly associated with the neurocognitive development of children," the researchers wrote. "At least some of the observed associations are not beneficial and guardians of children should consider these effects when children view TV for long periods of time."

The researchers conducted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans on the brains of 276 children between the ages of five and 18, evenly split between girls and boys. The children and their caregivers provided detailed information about how much time each child spent watching television per day. The amount of television viewed varied between zero and four hours per day, averaging about two.

TV-viewing brains are less developed

The researchers found that the more time that children spent watching television, the more gray matter that they had in the region at the anterior of the frontal lobe known as the frontopolar cortex. And while this might sound like a good thing, higher IQs and higher verbal intelligence have actually been linked with a thinner frontopolar cortex both in this study and in prior ones.

"These areas show developmental cortical thinning during development, and children with superior IQs show the most vigorous cortical thinning in this area," the researchers wrote.

The neurological changes associated with television viewing were the same in boys and girls, the researchers found.

"These anatomical correlates may be linked to previously known effects of TV viewing on verbal competence, aggression, and physical activity," the researchers speculated. "In particular, the present results showed effects of TV viewing on the frontopolar area of the brain, which has been associated with intellectual abilities."

Read a book instead

Numerous studies have established that TV viewing can have harmful effects on children, particularly on the very young. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that children under the age of two not be allowed to watch any television at all, and that older children be limited to a maximum of two hours per day.

According to the researchers, the study is the first to examine the effect of television on the brain's "structural development." Because of the study design, it is also unclear whether television viewing led directly to the observed brain changes, or whether the changes came from related factors such as less time spent engaging in social or physical activities.

The researchers speculated that part of the problem of television might be that, in contrast with activities such as learning to play a musical instrument, television viewing offers no variety in pace or complexity.

"When this type of increase in level of experience does not occur with increasing experience, there is less of an effect on cognitive functioning," they wrote.

Meanwhile, a separate study, conducted recently by researchers from Emory University, found that college students who read the novel Pompeii by Robert Harris showed increased conductivity in regions of the brain associated with language receptivity. These neurological changes began on the first day of reading and lasted for five days after completion of the book.

"It remains an open question how long these neural changes might last," researcher Gregory Berns said. "But the fact that we're detecting them over a few days for a randomly assigned novel suggests that your favorite novels could certainly have a bigger and longer-lasting effect on the biology of your brain."

Learn more: naturalnews.com


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 CET
Updated: Friday, 24 January 2014 01:03 CET
Monday, 29 August 2011
TV shortens life by 22 minutes per viewing hour, says study
Mood:  mischievious
Topic: Television


A new study suggests that mom's warning might not go far enough. It showed that too much television could make a person die sooner.

Researchers from the University of Queensland, Australia say every hour of TV watching after age 25 cuts almost 22 minutes off the viewer's lifespan.

For the study - published in the August 15 issue of the British Journal of Sports Medicine - researchers looked at TV viewing habits of 11,000 Aussies from the decade-long Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle survey. Compared with adults who watch no TV, Australians who spend a lifetime average of 6 hours per day in front of the tube "can expect to live 4.8 years less," the authors wrote.

Full Story from cbsnews.com


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 12:23 MEST
Friday, 8 May 2009
Dead Art on Sky Art 1
Mood:  bright
Topic: Television

One of my passions in life is that of the Victorian era. It all stemmed from a spate of vandalism in a local church yard several years ago. After witnessing the destruction that a few drunken youths can do on the way home from the pub I decided that it was important to preserve our history and the monuments to the deceased in one form or another.

The only feasible way I could think of doing this was by means of photography, so I decided to capture on camera all the significant monuments in this local church yard so at least there would be some kind of visual record for the future. Anyway one thing led to another and my interest in Victorian death architecture grew. I started traveling to all the significant Victorian cemeteries in and around London and soon built up an extensive collection of photographs which I decided to publish on a dedicated website.

The making of the website ( www.darkdestiny.co.uk ) has been an amazing experience. Along the way I've met some interesting and even one or two famous people, both dead and alive! We were even caught on camera during the making of a TV program called "Dead Art" which was filmed at the West Norwood Cemetery in south London in 2007. This particular episode is going to be aired on Monday 11th May at 7.00pm and Tuesday 12th May at 8.30am on Sky Arts 1.

Happy Viewing

Neil Cool  

ADDED 11th MAY

Well it looks as if Sky made a little error, they broadcast the wrong episode. I would imaging the London episode will be screened tomorrow night at 7.00 and Wednesday morning at 8.30 but we'll have to wait and see Surprised


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 01:08 MEST
Updated: Monday, 11 May 2009 20:50 MEST

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