Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Games Entertainment

Video Games and ADD 241

narratorDan writes "Cure your child with videogames! This is an interesting story about how video games and bio feedback can help children with attention deficit disorder (ADD). The academics at the Langley Research Centre in Virginia say the treatment helps the children train their brains to concentrate more and focus their attention." Don't look at me, I have a hard time concentrating on anything longer then a one paragraph Slashdot story *grin*.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Video Games and ADD

Comments Filter:
  • I think the problem with video games is not that they contribute to ADD or anything like that but simply that. However, they are inherently an escape mechanism. As a college student, I've seen the same thing over and over again with my friends. Stuff gets too much for them to deal with, so they lock themselves into a big game. I have a friend who did the same thing with Ultima Online. He plays computers 24 hours a day and his grades sure suffered. I guess the games make you feel like you're in control of your life when really you aren't and the more and more you play, the less control you have over your life.
  • All living organisms are unique. No two are alike. Some are better at some things than others. And intelligence is no different. We don't need movies and music and video games taken away from us just because we aren't cut out to become a PhD. Why not focus on what each kid *is* good at and encourage development of that trait. He may fall asleep in class but could be a great athlete or a strong laborer. There's no shame in that.
  • Responding to what may be a genuine mental disorder with violence or verbal abuse won't help it I think.

    this is a process to weed out those that don't have a genuine mental disorder. And cowing kids to sit down and study will help them learn, it's how all of them do it anyway, some just need a bit more encouragement.


    --
  • by jaa ( 22623 )
    Most studies confirm that people only remember 10 percent of what they hear, 30 percent of what they read, but about 80 percent of what they see and do.
  • I read these posting here on ./ with astonicement..
    Certainly, in the States AD(H)D is over diagnozed,
    judging by the great number of ADD-kids found in The States, because they don't add up to the numbers in Europe, but that doesn't means ADD isn't real..

    I also hear a lot of BS about self-discipline...
    It's really saying to a guy with only one leg
    and a prothese, that the reason he's not winning the 100 metres run on the Olympics, is because he's not trying hard enough..

    Any fscking idea what living a life with ADD is all about, huh?

    If you compare a person with ADD to a regular guy,
    it's a bit like this: a regular guy multiplexes his inputs from the real world and runs a routine
    on every input, an ADD guy hauls all input in asynchronously and all routines run in parallel..
    This has a tendancy to get a mess..
    The fun part is, when you put a very complex thing
    to a regular person and one with ADD, the regular person has trouble multiplexing inputs/things at speed, while an ADD person just accepts the stream
    of inputs and is more able to decern the keys to
    solving a certain matter.. Also the chaotic nature of it's brains, leads to much more creative sollutions..
    (Only when it comes to planning and organizing stuff, it's really like going through a large array without pointers, with just a hunge where
    you should lookup things..)

    I think gaming is about doing a lot of things at the same time, without a major focus on any of those elements, which leads to good results compared to a regular person and leads to more self-asteem for a person with ADD..
    ("you see, I'm good for something..")
    Yes, I've owned a Nintendo 8bit, 16 bit, N64, Sony PlayStation and when I turned 16, I started with
    personal computers (didn't own one myself until I was 18) and maybe that helped me for the better..

    Let me give small selection of things I've to bear with:
    "You're the brightess guy I know, to bad it doesn't show in your grades"/"why don't you try harder at school, if I can do it, certainly you should be able to accomplish that"
    "Mate, if you wouldn't finish school, I would be heavily disapointed in you.."

    Well, sorry, besides trading school in electronics, I never finished anything else
    because of ADD related symptoms or the trouble
    ADD got me into...

    Still I am a multi-discipline, creative, social guy (but very straightforward and honest and not all people like that), that knows more about
    electronics, data-communication, Industrial Automation, Test&Measurenent, machine construction, computers than many other people
    I encounter, but still I am not able to get certain key jobs, because I don't have the papers, simple because ADD is giving me a hard time studing and not because I'm lazy!

    The reason why I say this, is because a niece (besides other relatives) of my has ADHD and is treated like a retard and kept a retard, just because she's different and that sucks...

    ADD is a lot more, than having an attention span of a gold-fish!!
    ADD people are not retards, lazy or weird people
    that hate self-discipline, they are just different!

    Here's a good link:
    http://www.livingwithadd.com
    (yeah, I'm to lazy
    right now to html this thing, ADD persons still
    *can* be lazy..)

    Other info is readily available on the internet
    if you really want to know something more about ADD, in stead of letting your brain produce noise
    on your output leading to your mouth...

  • The article isn't saying that if everyone played Quake they wouldn't have ADD.

    The article is saying that NASA researchers have created a device that monitors patients brainwaves. They've hooked this device to a video game written special for the device. Winning and Losing is at least partially linked to your brainwaves and how much of the ADD-symptom brainwaves you're putting out.

    The game itself is probably about as fun as Math Blasters. -Andy
  • anything longer THAN a one paragraph slashdot story!

  • I'm not sure how much my personal experiences relate to this subject (I might not have ADD, but it wouldn't surprise me if I've got something else...), but I'd say that video games increase concentration. Unfortunately for me, it only really applies to increased concentration *when playing video games*. So, I may be able to play Starcraft or something for hours on end, with all attention paid to every detail of the game and none to the world around me (food, hygiene, girls showing off their nipple rings (true story, really. ;) ). But when it comes to anything else- classes and writing papers in particular- it can only hold my attention for about five minutes before I have to find something else. Whatever. Just felt I had to comment.
  • Damn straight!

    I firmly believe that drugs that alter brain chemistry are a tool, and should not carry any stigma for their use. There's never an issue with a diabetic injecting insulin; there should never be an issue with an ADD/hyperactive/depressed/name-your-condition-here person using a drug to create balance in their life.

    So I won't say anything bad about Ritalin, Prozac or other drugs: properly prescribed, they are a godsend for their users. They take a chemically unbalanced brain and bring it back to balance.

    But our medical system -- oy! It's all-too-willing to pop a pill. Your kid is active? Why he must be hyperactive! You're feeling blue? Why you must be clinically depressed! You have trouble sleeping? You must need tamazapan!

    GPs are under-educated for the work that they are allowed to do. Brain chemistry is still a huge unknown, and it's becoming apparent that nutrition, lifestyle and emotional attitudes have immense influence on our brains.

    But being poorly informed and needing to find a quick fix, doctors prescribe their pill-of-the-week to all and sundry.

    Consumers, being even more ignorant and less willing to look for deeper answers, go along with it.

    Drugs are a tool, for sure.

    But it's a damn shame that we're using hammers to drive screws into place.

    There are many children who will see the world in brighter colours and with greater happiness because they're correctly prescribed a drug that alters their brain chemistry. It's great when their problems are nailed by Ritalin. :-)

    There are many, many more children who's "hyperactive" behaviour is caused by environmental factors that their parents or doctors are too lazy or stupid to investigate. They're the ones who are condemned to a life of grey because their guardians didn't do their job. It's a shameful loss when they're screwed because they got hammered with Ritalin. :-(



    --
  • "go back to the mall that spawned you."
  • I'll buy the ADD stuff, but I don't know about playing video games to learn to cope with stress. I know more than one person who deals with tough spots in video games by pausing the game to strategize.

    Last I heard F-15s don't come with pause buttons.

  • Perhaps video game therapy helps children and pilots in different ways.

    For a child, the game is attractive enough to avoid distractions away from the task. Irrelevant impulses to squirm around are ignored by the brain which is too busy processing the sights, sounds, and strategies of the game. For once, the kid may be able to follow a task from beginning to end; for example, leading a mouse to the end of a maze. That may be the child's first clue about planning strategies. He learns subtle new skills as well as the rewards of patience and effort.

    For a pilot, the game can alienate him from reality. Success and failure become abstract ("Health=0, Insert Token to Continue"). His reasoning is strictly analytical and without fear of consequence. He is able to focus and strategize without feeling pressure. It's a skill that he can carry over into a mission.

    Video games may provide a structure capable of teaching these skills, but there is a risk: a player who is detached from reality, too busy winning to think about quitting. If video games trigger a new insight in the mind of the player, then he should quit while he's ahead (or after he's satisfied and had enough fun).


    --David M. Moore

  • video games might help problem solving, hand-eye, etc. but they promote short attention spans by reinforcing instant gratification.

    Coin-op video games have instant gratification. When I try to get through all D (hex) levels of Super Mario Bros. The Lost Levels without using a single continue, that's not instant gratification.

    And that's only a side-scroller. Adventure games are even better in this regard.

    Games that are based on coin-op genres, like fighing games inparticular, THOSE focus on instant gratification.

    But the biggest offender of all is Tetris. Yes, everyone's favorite game, or at least the favorite game of people who "don't like video games," Tetris is more focused on instant decisionmaking, leading to instant gratification, than any other game. I never approached a Tetris game thinking about how I was going to approach level 9... it is the most present-oriented game there is. It works well for short attention spans becaue you don't need to pay attention to any one thing for more time than it takes to place the surrnt piece and move on the the next randomly selected piece. You can't plan ahead because all the pieces are randomly generated. Playing with "show next piece" is generally considered wussing out, even though it is even more intullectually stimulating. This is why I consider Tetris to symbolize the worst, most attention-limited, instant-gratification-oriented aspects of our society.

    Suber Mario Brothers, on the other hand, now THERE's a game you have to think about while playing.

  • The drugs taking for AD[H]D are (according to the psychiatrist who prescribed them to me) amphetamines, weak kinds of speed. If you have AD[H]D, they will help adjust your brainwaves to normal levels, otherwise they do the opposite. In most people that means they get wired and hyper. In some people they just kind of shut off. If the drugs have a negative effect, then that person is most likely misdiagnosed.
  • This sounds like the role playing / video game that Ender played at Battle School. Has anyone heard of any studies that used video games to monitor or diagnose personality disorders? This seems like it could have potential....
  • You have a good point too.

    But do you have ANY idea just how often people are just writen off as being "hyperactive" and given ritalyn as if it were some kind of panacea?

    I, personally, know two people from high school who were (mis)diagnosed as having ADD. At my HS we had this dipshit school councilor who thought that a BS in pop psychology and a "Child Development Certificate" (whatever the fsck THAT is) somehow made him qualified to diagnose mental disorders.

    He had this arangement with one of the local doctors where he would write a letter testifying to a child's problems in school and that the kid might be hyperactive. The doctor, after a cursory exam of course, would promptly condemn the patient to ritalyn.

    This happened to both of the friends I mentioned. Neither one actually suffered from ADD. Wanna know the truth?

    One actually turned out to be dyslexic. You can imagine the effect that that had on his learning process; which led to his (mis)diagnosis. It wasn't until high school (after being on ritalyn for a year) that the truth was discovered. Fortunately, the ritalyn didn't mess him up too much.

    The same, unfortunately, cannot be said for my other ADD (mis)diagnosed friend. Ritalyn only led to MORE problems for her. She actually became suicidal briefly. It wasn't until after lengthy (and expensive for her family) counciling and examination by a REAL psychiatrist, that it was discovered that she suffered not from ADD, but from Bipolar Disorder. A change to the PROPER medication did wonders for her, but didn't erase the years of torment before ritalyn, and the months of near psychosis ON ritalyn.

    So you'll please forgive me if and when I have kids, and they have problems in school; and some fscking pop shrink says "oh, they're just hyperactive, here hop them up on ritalyn"; I tell the asshole to take a flying leap.

    john
    Resistance is NOT futile!!!

    Haiku:
    I am not a drone.
    Remove the collective if

  • For the most part, Ritalin is prescibed for the good of the parents and teachers, not the child.

    and those are parents that both work, and teachers dealing with balooning class sizes [house.gov]. The drugs are yet another shortcut to the American Dream. For me, it's not as much a question of how my friends that use(d) Ritalin acted when they were on it, but how they acted when they tried to stop.

    --
  • I have ADD, not ADHD. I'm about as immobile as any computer user, but my mind is constantly going at 100mph.

    Thank God I wasn't diagnosed until I was 26. If my parents knew I had ADD when I was, say, 12, then I'd be the spokesman for the Ritalin Council.

    I'm currently taking Wellbutrin SR and it's working wonders.

    I don't have a problem concentrating. My problem is that I can only concentrate on one thing at a time. As soon as I move to a new subject, everything I was doing before gets saved to disk, and the cache buffers get cleared.

    And, for God sake, don't talk to me when I'm in the middle of something and expect me to remember it in 1 minute. Ain't gonna happen.

    Thank God for Palm Pilots!!
  • Does it strike anyone else as odd that 3 or so years ago, video games were part of the 'cause' of ADD, especially when the kids were supposed to be studying?

    And now it's part of the cure??

    Gotta love those scientists...

    If it doesn't work as part of the problem, make it part of the solution... (Just like years before the global warming problem, there was the global cooling problem...)

    Kierthos
  • That's the point.

    Check out the Sig field in the "Edit User Preferences" page of Slashdot.

    Note the redundancy.

    Rinse. Lather. Repeat.

    --
    while ( !universe->perfect() ) {
    hack (reality);

  • hhhmmm My attention span has never been longer than the time it takes me to drink that first beer..

    But, seriously, this isn't the first time someone has reported something good coming from video games. The question, as with everything, is: Do the various 'good' thing out way the 'bad' things.

    Don't get me wrong, I have wasted many hours in front of my Atari, Nintendo or computer playing everything from Combat to UT. Realistically, I don't think that there is anything wrong with video games in general, but I have met several people who do nothing but sit infront of their (insert favorite gaming device) for days at a time. This can't be healthy in any way.
    Hockey - Canada's gift to the world
  • I don't have a problem missing lunch. Let's just say that I could afford to skip a few. :)

    Yes, I am fairly young, but I'm actually older than most of the guys at my company. Plus, I've been coding fairly regularly since I was 12, so I've got more experience than many of the others combined. Which means I'm somewhat senior. Which means more design documents and less coding... I love writing design docs, but I have lots of trouble finishing them.

    I haven't been fired, but after 3 years in the work world, I'm on my 3rd job. All 3 are very different. (FPGA design, embedded software and large project).

    By the way, do you have trouble shifting from one task to another, or getting back into something one you have been distracted? I know I sure do. Good luck with your work, hope you can bet back to some real coding soon.

    Sometimes. It depends on whether I was in "the zone" before I was distracted, or not!

    later,

    Bryan

  • ...but wouldn't little doses of heroin work even better? Now that's an incentive to control your brain waves.

    Or better yet, combine the two. Give them control when they concentrate and the heroin when they make a kill in the game.

    They would be the perfect soldiers. We could build our very own force of Jem'Hadar!

    Muahahahaha!

    ---
    Despite rumors to the contrary, I am not a turnip.
  • My brother is only 17 and sits in a chair 24x7 playing Ultima Online. Other people pay for his accounts and pay him for "items" and other things in the game.

    He only takes breaks to eat and pee, and occassionally he'll take a break to play starcraft. It was nearly a vacation for him when he beat Diablo II in two days.

    In all seriousness he does have a part time job at Pizza Hut and is taking GED classes.

    I'm forcing him to go on a weekend vacation with me just to get him out from in front of the computer.

    What do you do for someone like this? He dropped out of high school and is working on getting his GED. He does have some computer skills. I was trying to get him interested in web design but he can't find any place to hire him so it's not of much interest to him.
  • by Kp2 ( 12516 )
    Well... I've completed forty sessions of neurofeedback and I must say that is works well. The objective of the treatment is not playing games; rather it is to train the thalamus on beta (12-15Hz) waves. Games are just a way to that goal.

    I did like pacman quite a bit :P
  • I never learned by being forced to sit down and study; in fact, it discouraged me from it. You don't instill an appreciation of learning by forcing it. Personally, I think a lot of the behavioral problems we see with young children is a result of them being forced to sit quietly for 8 hours a day. Most of what I remember from my pre-college education is the mind numbing boredom.
    --
  • I can't wait for their book to be released.

    The Langley Research Centre's Research on Attention Deficit Disorder and Hey! Let's go ride our bikes!"

    (okay, I copied it from a list of books you'll never see. Mod me down)
  • Ok, I'm not a doctor, and I have very little understanding of ADD, but this seems odd to me. As far as I can tell the article pretty much says that ADD can be effectively treated by prolonged concentration. It sounds like the viedeo games (and associated feedback) are just a means to encourage that concentration, and are fairly arbitrarily chosen. That makes me really wonder about the true nature of ADD. If it were a serious phsiological problem I wouldn't think that it could be treated quite so well with exercises in disciplined thinking.

    If there's a Slashdotter who could throw some light on the nature of ADD and it's other forms of treatment it would be much appreciated. I did a little bit of reading over at www.add.org [add.org] but it looks like there's a lot of data to sift through before anything even starts to become clear.
    --
  • FWIW when I was 24, I read a book called A nswers to Distraction [amazon.com], and it profoundly affected me. For years I had struggled with this inability for me to take the things I could visualize in my head (a drawing, a program, a story, whatever) and make my hands produce it. This, combined with a knack for going full steam ahead with projects and constantly abandoning them and developing little to no patience for my 2 year-old, ended up bringing on major bouts of depression to boot.

    Then, after reading letters from adults with ADD, all of a sudden things really clicked for me, and I felt like I could finally beat this thing that had frustrated me since I was kid. Long story short, I take meds (non-Ritalin) every day and I see my now 8 year-old son starting to display some of the same traits that I had for so long. Seeing this article gives me hope that I can help my son control his ADD and take the blessings it gives and fight down the bad parts of it WITHOUT BEING MEDICATED.

    I hate the fact that I take these damn pills every day, but I've tried going off them and I just don't have the coping skills I need, my son now will have the option of being himself and making all this work for him instead of against him.



  • Question the morality of their actions? Most people have been indoctrinated to believe that morality is out-moded. "Ethics" is the proper term, and "Situational Ethics" is the "proper" application of ethics.

    In other words: It's okay for the United States to bomb Iraq because Sadam Hussien is Evil (it has nothing to do with oil... please pay no attention to the thousands of attrocities commited by non-oil producing nations.)

    I spent eight years in the military myself (yes, I got out with an Honorable Discharge.) As a disabled veteran, I have one thing to say about "wars" like Desert Storm: WE HAD NO BUSINESS THERE.

  • Would you turn down the money if you were offered it? Of course not, don't be stupid.

    If I was an athlete (and I am), this is my thought process:

    1) I like sports
    2) I like money

    These sports generate revenue from ticket sales, concessions, and most importantly, tv contracts. If you don't like the higher salaries, vote with your wallet and stop watching and going to games.

    It's no sweat off my back that athletes make that much $, because the owners would be getting it if they didn't. And more importantly, who cares? If you want to spend that much $ to go to a game, don't whine when you see players and owners being paid with your cash. You are being entertained (by some teams at least.. my Steelers suck this year :( )

  • I'll let a doctor explain it, as I lack both the inclination and the expertise to do so with authority.

    Many ADHDers value aspects of their ADHD, such as the creativity and a different style of thinking, including the ability to
    hyperfocus when there is an intense interest in a topic or task.

    -excerpt from an article [pacpub.com] in the Princeton Packet, by the clinical director of the Princeton ADD center.
  • SS is really for older children. I don't think any TV is designed for 8 month olds. Teletubbies is designed for 1 - 2 year olds.

    Another problem with SS is that it is a whole hour. This is probably too much TV in one go for an infant.

    My two year old will play while her older brother watches Sesame Street, then she comes over and watches Elmo's World, which is about 10 minutes at the end, and definitely more appropriate for toddlers.

    --
  • I just scrolled down from this [bbc.co.uk] and noticed the related story about Lara Croft [bbc.co.uk] Don't suppose there's a connection...

    Still, they should be looking better if that Tomb Raider movie comes out and scores big as Lara's ..uh.. endowments. I hope it's not another bomb [imdb.com].

    Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
  • by br4dh4x0r ( 137273 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @10:58AM (#827417)
    Most interactive audio/visual activities increase concentration. That's why pilots don't just read about how to fly a plane, they go into flight simulators.

    What's that saying about you tell me, I remember 10%, you show me, I remember 30%, etc?

    love,
    br4dh4x0r
  • Maybe, but it's definately not for people with very short attention spans.


    - Jeff A. Campbell
    - VelociNews (http://www.velocinews.com [velocinews.com])
  • ...destroy your TV. Ever notice that a lot of people get edgy and can't concentrate 25 minutes and 50 minutes into a project? Gee. I wonder why THAT is.
  • While the careful calibration of video-game feedback devices may be useful in 'fixing' ADD, it still gives the impression that 'hyperactive' kids are somehow bad and need to be cured. Some of the best and brightest people I know have ADD and to think of their curiosity and their mind being 'cured' is disconcerting, to say the least.

    Okay, the "symptoms" that characterize Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, have a high correlation with the "symptoms" of giftedness. So, yes, treating it as simply a problem to be solved is probably not the best strategy.

    On the other hand, the knee jerk "Don't treat creativity/individuality as a disease" response is just as wrong in the other direction. When I am medicated for my ADD (admittedly in conjunction with major depression), I am more productive and creative, because I'm actually able to follow through on what I think of.

  • I have mild ADD, and I have seen hyperactivity in children TRIGGERED by video games and the like. True, maybe video games help develop prediction/goal seeking/concentration on the task at hand. But on the flipside, however, they detach you from what's really going on.

    Just look at a flock of 8-9 year old boys and you'll see what I mean.

    It's too sad that we have to rely on technology for things that are developed naturally in a good environment.

    Not to say I haven't duct-taped a runt or two to the tele with his n64 while babysitting...

    It's just the reenactment that fills the hyperactivity =)

    Which is prob. why the parents call me in the first place.
  • But... ADD and ADHD (as I am sure that you know this) are different things. ADHD are those childern that are hyperactive and have ADD. I assume that those with ADD do not have this problem.

    I know from my own experience, I played video games... but I guess not enough to help my ADD... or... maybe it is better than what it could have been had I not played.

  • I wouldn't hang out with a guy I knew when he was on Ritalin. He just wasn't the same. It was like it forced him to be oversensitive about everything.
  • by FPhlyer ( 14433 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:14AM (#827432) Homepage
    So, now we are supposed to believe that video games can both cure a child's Attention Deficit Disorder AND turn them into Uzi-toting terrorist mass-murderers?

    ...I guess parent's just can't win.

  • by BOredAtWork ( 36 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @01:04PM (#827438)
    Raise your own damn kids(tm). That's my new campaign. This is just one more (of the many) bullshit steps society is taking to shirk the responsibility of raising their OWN DAMN KIDS.

    It's simple, really. The responsibility of raising kids is the PARENT'S. We've tried to pawn it off on day care centers. We've tried to pawn it off on the schools. We've tried to pawn it off on TV. Music. Movies. Government. Anything except ourselves.

    Here's the story folks; we can't suddenly plot Johnny down in front of the nintendo and pat ourselves on the back saying "well, he's learning to focus." This is such bullshit. I'm sorry to point out the obvious here, but if you want a "normal" kid, you've got to participate in their lives, and possibly rethink your definition of "normal". In this respect, I've gotta agree with the above post.

    Ok, offtopic rant time! (yay)

    I'm sick and tired of reading all these articles about saving the children from the evils of the world, and having every last one be a steaming pile of shit. Come on. "Write your congressman, save the children from Ozzy Osbourne!" "Support library filtering software, save the children from porn!" "Support drug prison terms, save the children from evil plants!"

    People, it's a very simple idea you have to grasp: a parent should be the biggest influence in a child's life. End of story. If you're concerned about music/drugs/porn/crime/gangs/whatever, you've not talked to your kids enough. Same thing with this ADD stuff; if your child has a genuine medical condition, spend enough time with them to notice it, and get it treated. If your child is just crying out for attention (my theory on the majority of ADD cases), it's YOUR FAULT. How dare parents today hand their kids off to day care centers and schools, and sign happily on the line when some overstressed undertrained teacher says "ridalin would help". This article is just MORE fuel on the fire; one more parent is gonna buy his kid a nintendo, and say "well, they're learning... now I can work an hour later!". People are pawning their kids upbringing off on anything EXCEPT themselves. This just provides one MORE thing for 'em to use.

    Here's the basics folks: If you don't want your child to act out, teach them respect. If you don't want your child to commit crimes, teach them why it's wrong. If you don't want them smoking pot, teach them it's dangerous. If you don't want them having sex early, teach them it's wrong. Don't sit your kids in front of a nintendo to learn to focus, and then complain that video games are sending the wrong messages. Don't sit them in front of the TV to learn moral values and then complain that TVs are immoral. Raise your own damn kids. Don't expect me, the government, the schools or the media to do it for you.

    If my parents would have listened to counselors/teachers, I'd have been in the learning disabled program by 3rd grade. My mother got a letter suggesting that I be placed in that program, and went to the principal insisting I be IQ tested. She still breaks out the "your son has special needs; he's blessed with special talents" letter now and then. And the "your son has special needs; he's not showing satisfactory progress" one that had preceeded it. Which one do you want for YOUR kids?

    --

  • I never learned by being forced to sit down and study; in fact, it discouraged me from it.

    you're reading in too far about what I said. It's not about being quiet for 8 hours, but doing so when you need to. Mainly my point was about instilling a bit of discipline in wild children. This isn't the answer for severely disturbed children, but for IMHO 90% of the kids who get 1 hour ADD pronouncements.
    --
  • I've just discovered an, umm, less-than-amazing way to use computer games to calm down.

    I set my threshold to +2 while browsing Slashdot comments. {grin}

    I know the trolls are still there screaming but I don't have to deal with them as much. Sadly I'll miss some good comments too, but them's the breaks. Of course the jury is still out as to whether or not all of the calmness advantage is eliminated when I moderate browsing at -1 ...

    WWJD -- What Would Jimi Do?

  • We all know AD&D is just a tool of Satan [deadalewives.com]. ;-) So just go back to playing Pokemon like a good prole and pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.
  • There have ALWAYS been "reports" and "studies" that show video games are good/bad/ugly, depending on who's paying for the study.

    The idea that video games might help with ADD/ADHD is interesting, and entirely possible, as ADD people have enormous problems with prioritizing (rather an important trait, when you're being shot at by plasma-cannon-wielding maniacs from outer space!). They're also invariably untidy. (If you have an untidy car or room, you're probably ADD, bipolar, HFA, or Random Access.)

    IMHO, there is one other important factor. Do ADD people REALLY WANT to be "normal"? Let's face it. "Normal" people buy Windows, act like jerks, rip off each other, and destroy their brains and bodies.

    Personally, I'd say sod normality, and act like a geek. Geeks have better long-term survivability, a better overall attitude, and aren't so concerned with irrelevent differences such as age, gender, race, species, or braincell mapping.

  • The games aren't the cure, they are just the figurative carrot-on-a-stick.

    If the kid concentrates and his brainwaves act "normal" his control pad works better.

    Thwapp!

    ---
    Despite rumors to the contrary, I am not a turnip.
  • I think you're totally wrong. It's not about a kid "rebeling". It's about pounding a strong will into shape. Sometimes the logic of a wooden paddle is great at "internalizing the need to study."

    --

    When they get to the stage where they're asking for your help to remind them that they're wandering

    This is when they've internalized your tactic and are offering a counter-tactic. Remember, ADD kids are great at playing games.

    --
  • Most interactive audio/visual activities increase concentration.

    Yes, but if you read the whole article, you see that the video games aren't actually doing any curing. "Cure your child with videogames!" was a bad way to title it. They're just using the video games as positive feedback for when the children show improvement.
  • So you advocate for sporting venues to just "turn over" profits to education as opposed to spreading the wealth accross the people who drive the profit? maybe if education was privatized you would see teachers salaries go up on its own... maybe if teaching wasn't the "cop out" degree at most universities the quality would go up.. dont blame athelets for our stupid government and universities putting actual education last on the list of priorities.. I'd pay $200 to see drew bledsoe in the Super Bowl before I'd give 95% of the teachers I've had in the past $1.
  • confused, lost, and unhappy. Kind of a blank stare, a frown, and a general depression. You could just tell they were very uncomfortable. The two that I'm thinking of both said that they had tried to stop taking it, but had been on it for a number of years and the effect it had on them had become "normal". Both were in the 18-24 demographic when I knew them.

    There is (now third hand) anecdotal evidence of young children becoming suicidal after ceasing treatment. And yes, this is a scare tactic as blatant as thetruth.com commercials.

    As much as I enjoy a good chemical brain bath from time to time, I draw the line at giving mind-altering drugs to pre-adolescents ESPECIALLY with the expressed desire of getting them to sit down and shut up.
    --
  • Being ADD, with hyperactivity myself, and raised with several members of my family being ADD, I am inclined to agree that video games would help assist the concentration and focusing of children with ADD.

    But, I do see a problem with this: Children with ADD (as you know) do have a tendency to drift from doing what they are actually working on. Especially to things that do not pose a challenge to them.
    When I would come home from grade school, I would plop myself in front of the video game consol and not look up for hours on end. Legos [lego.com] had the same effect on me as well where I would create and destroy worlds all before dinner.
    Then, came the time to do home work. Home work? What's that? There was more interesting worlds to explore within the world of building blocks and little people.

    Now, I have read in places and magazines where there had been the children that had ADD seem to have been "cured". When, in fact, the children with ADD had become adults with ADD. There is also an organization called CHADD [chadd.org] that deals with Children and adults with ADD.

    Also, schools who would have "problem children" and usually quick to diagnose these children, just because they fit into a certain category [aacap.org] of symptoms. The children are given a label and put on drugs without a thorough diagnosis.

    Now, thru CHADD [chadd.org], and other organizations, adults who are diagnosed with ADD seem to have found a nitch in where they belong in today's job market.
    Those jobs do include:

    • Emergency rooms
    • Help Desks
    • Computer programmers
    • Other computer related fields
    • and others I may have forgot

    The key to assisting these children is not to drug them out or to set them in front of a television or video game. Give the children something constructive to do. I think that due to my parents' work, I turned out alright.
  • I was raised by the TV! Are you threatenning my daddy?

    -Ben

    P.S. Is it bad for my 8 month old baby to be watching sesame street?

    -1 sad
  • I think this pretty much proves ADD doesn't exist in these kids. If a child can maintain their attention on a video game but not in a classroom, this isn't a disorder, this is simple boredom and an idicator that something in the "traditional" classroom environment isn't working. Instead of doping kids up because we want them to behave like dull adults, we should be rewarding them for being energetic and enthused while working with them to channel that energy into a purpose. Kids are hyper, kids have short attention spans. If they're entertained by something, they will not have any problem maintaining attention.
  • Hey, if pinball worked for a deaf, dumb, and blind kid, I'm sure a little N64 can cure ADD.

    Pokrefke
    aka - The Whiny Complainer
  • video games ... promote short attention spans.... Roleplaying, on the other hand... demanding a more robust attention span.

    What about activities such as Final Fantasy VII that are both roleplaying and video games?


    <O
    ( \
    XGNOME vs. KDE: the game! [8m.com]
  • It's too sad that we have to rely on technology for things that are developed naturally in a good environment.

    We build automobiles, elevators, and escalators so that we don't have to do as much physical work. Well, we start to get fat and die from heart disease so what is our fix? Jog or bike down to your local gym and use the stairmaster and treadmill to keep in shape.

    LK
  • Actually, its in Hampton, VA which is near Virginia Beach. I got the same vibe when I saw 'Langley', 'Virginia' and 'Government Research' all in the same article.

    You can learn more about the research center through this nifty Shockwave-based Interface [nasa.gov].
  • Saying TV causes hyperactivity is not very concerete. There's no proof. What about kids who go out and play and are hyperactive? This statement is a causal relationship that blames one thing on another without the thousands of other factors that bring things like ADD along.

    Next we'll be saying that all people who have certain colour skin or are from certain places are X because of who they are.

    ---

  • Ritalin and now Video Games.

    Hmmm. I once spent three hours riding with a woman who had a child diagnosed with ADHD (H is for Hyperactivity - this is more extreme than ADD). She and her child tried many things but she really wanted to avoid drugs. Eventually, she did what should be obvious to any parent who loves their children and actually spends time trying to help them be real human beings (instead of vidiots): she started to look at his attention deficit and his hyperactivity as a _good_ thing. She just basically called them something different: intense curiosity and enormous energy. She and her child talked a lot about things and eventually they came up with a really simple solution for the times when his "disability" became difficult for others around him: he would run around the block as many times as it took to burn off some of that energy. Aparently this worked marvels. His school work improved etc. etc. <miracle story continues...>.

    So what's the point? Well, as other posters are sure to mention this seems to me to be another case of parents and society prefering technological solutions to solutions based on responsibility. I have recently been reading a book called How To Multiply Your Baby's Intelligence [amazon.com] which basically talks about how the nature vs. nurture issue is a moot point until we actually figure out how to take full advantage of the nuture side of the equation. The book goes on to describe so-called miraculous accomplishments by brain injured children as well as normal children such as: reading, high speed math, learning multiple languages, etc. all before the age of 3!!! I have used some of the techniques with my own son who is now 26 months old [berteig.org]. He was able to read about 40 words at age 14 months. We (my wife and I) dropped the ball and didn't continue with his learning up till now. Hopefully we are not to late.

    Ever since I was a child, I have always felt that adults seriously underestimate the abilities of children. I am concerned that our diagnoses such as ADD and ADHD are really a reflection of our impatience and intollerance of children's natural abilities.

  • by tolldog ( 1571 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:28AM (#827498) Homepage Journal
    I know that there are several people that have ADD and don't know it... there are also people that have been diagnosed with it and don't have it.

    With that being said, I do agree... self disciplin can help some with ADD. The problem is that ADD stems from a lack of a certain chemical in the brain... which is interesting... because that means that the drugs that we do take are stimulants...

    I know that with the proper mixture of self disciplin and medicine, some people that have ADD never appear to have the problem. On the flip side, I know that I have problems remembering to take my medicine. Sort of a catch 22.

    I came from a household where self disciplin and being responsible for what you are doing was important. I feel the same way. I still have problems with it. Is it because I have no self disciplin... I don't think so.

    I think that the core of the problem comes from the fact that those with ADD strugle with self disciplin. That is why that alone can't help people. I am supprised that prolonged concentration can help counteract ADD.

    I would like to see more conclusive data than brain waves and the like.... does this study help the brain produce more of this chemical? That would make sense. I know that if a person takes more medicine than they are supposed to, the brain will lower its natural creation of the chemicals.

  • Yeah, that's really "flamebait" to call into question chemical treatment of a symptom with no established biological basis. Good point.
  • ADD is generally an inability to concentrate when you want to-- you can concentrate sometimes (often better than most people), but not on what you choose to focus on.

    This tends to mean that people with ADD have more good ideas, since they shift easily and hyperfocus, but their idea tend to be less useful to them, because they tend to be about something other than what they're intending to think about.

    Learning to control their focus when they want to can be very helpful for this reason; in some situations it's better not to have ADD, while in others it's beneficial. Being able to switch under your own control is really helpful.

    Just because it can be controlled without drugs doesn't mean it's not a neurochemical disorder, either. A large portion of what the brain does is produce drugs for itself, so being able to control it mentally may involve producing the right neurotransmitters to get a more normal mix.

    At least one common form of dyslexia, caused in part, ironically, by some video games, makes it nearly impossible to read, but can be fixed by covering parts of the text that aren't being read. Still, the problem manifests itself in ways that can be measured objectively (the person is trained to respond to somewhere next to where they're looking, i.e., the place stuff will happen next in a side-scrolling video game).
  • From what I've read about it, the ADD (and ADHD) behavior is theorized to come because various parts of the brain are not providing the correct _inhibition_ behavior (treating the brain as a massive neural network of excitation & inhibition mechanisms).

    The Ritalin actually stimulates the neurons in those parts of the brain which actively suppress activity in other parts of the brain, which causes the sufferer to have much more control over their attention & behavior.
  • This article continues to mention ADD but it does not distinguish if it is ADD or ADHD (ADD with hyperactivity). Not all people with ADD are hyperactive.

    I imagine that video games and other forms of treatment will work differently based on what exactly the child has.

    On a side note, on of the items they used to diagnose my ADD was a computer program, much like a video game, that measured response time over a certain amount of time. It was on an Apple IIe if I can remember correctly. The idea was to press a button every time a square appeared inside another square... or something like that.
  • SpuriousGeorge was the first [slashdot.org].
    <O
    ( \
    XGNOME vs. KDE: the game! [8m.com]
  • I have very strong ADHD, and I can say that video games are one of the few things I can concentrate on, unless they have a lot of reading, that's what kills me. It's not just about playing video games, they make the controls less responsive to encourage certain brain patterns. Once they are acheived the controls become more responsive. So they're using video games as a positive reinforcement. I've tried several kinds of pharmacological treatments and only the most potent legal drug in TX had any noticeable effect. And even then it only meant I could read stuff for maybe 20 minutes longer.
  • by Shotgun ( 30919 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:32AM (#827529)
    The article says that the contols become responsive when the subject raises the high frequency brainwaves. The way this is done is by being calm.

    It is possible to learn to be calm under high pressure situations. I spent a semester at the US Air Force Academy (found out that not everyone in the Air Force flew fighter planes 24/7, and I had no chance of being one of those that did). I am still amazed at how much calmer I was under nearly all situations when I came home. I was rather high strung before that stint. The video games are the same as the upperclassmen yelling contradictory orders in our face. There is a high-stress situation that must be handled calmly (any sign of being flustered was a sure ticket of more 'treatment').

    Currently, video games offer the stress, but there is nothing to force it to be handled with serenity. My youngest son is border ADD (he ain't touching Ridlin), and I think this would help him. But I'd like to get one of these devices to use myself. I'm a little to high strung (USAFA was 15yrs ago), and I think this would be better than meditation.

  • by Haven ( 34895 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:01AM (#827532) Homepage Journal
    when you can use drugs? If you just give little Jonny some Ritalin you can lock in him the closet, and he won't be stopping the parents from watching Survivor by using his gaming console.
  • Studies have shown that the symptoms of ADD in children are difficult to distinguish from those of Bipolar disorder ("Manic Depression".)

    It's interesting to note how few adults maintain ADD's symptomatic behavior and the fact that so few children are diagnosed Bipolar. They numbers are nearly inversely proportional. I'm not saying ADD doesn't exist, but it's a phenomenon worth noting.
  • by Spurious George ( 225993 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:02AM (#827539)
    I always thought AD&D was much healthier than video games!

    Although, when you mix the two, there's trouble... at least, that's the story at my local Baldur's Gate Anonymous group...

    --
    while ( !universe->perfect() ) {
    hack (reality);

  • There are actually many, many teachers who went into teaching in spite of low salaries and high teaching loads, because they want to help people learn, not because they couldn't do anything else. I have an incredible amount of respect for those people.

    However, there aren't enough of them. So the standards have to be lowered so that people who can't get higher paying jobs can make it through the curriculum.

    If teacher pay scales went up 50% across the board, I bet we would see a dramatic increase in the number of good and excellent teachers. Unfortunately, in the current political climate it seems the only way this is going to happen is through further privatization of schools, which is IMO, a bad thing.

    Also there are some good ones out there already. I was privleged to encounter many excellent teachers throughout my K-12 career, while my brother, 2 years younger, had teachers ranging from bad to worse. In the same school system. If it wasn't for one of my 3rd grade teachers, I would probably be a high school dropout professional stoner mooching off my parents.
  • An ability to concentrate on *certain things* does *not* indicate a lack of ADD.

    I have taken numerous tests designed to diagnose the disorder, including brainwave analysis, and have tested positively on all of them.

    A symptom that frequently goes along with ADD is tendency for the attention to *fixate* on certain things, to such a point that all other stimuli are effectively blocked out, somewhat analogous to mental "tunnel vision".

    Before I had undertaken any treatment for ADD, I had been observed several times to pick up a book and read for upwards of 6 hours or so, without eating, getting up, etc., because my attention had become so fixated on the activity at hand that I was almost physically incapable of stopping until the book ~4-500pages was finished.

    In the same way, I have seen people incapable of finishing a single sentence without being distracted by a shiny object(slight exaggeration) play Quake for hours numbering in the double digits (no exaggeration).

  • Don't look at me, I have a hard time concentrating on anything longer then a one paragraph Slashdot story

    Don't feel too bad Rob, just look at all the people on /. who can't be bothered to RTFA before they post. (Read the Funny Articles).

  • ADD is, by definition, a disease. This disease includes a chemical imbalance in the brain. Much like clinical depression, it has symptoms that are not conclusive. Normal people get bored, normal people get depressed. The difference is, people with those diseases are unable to control themselves to, in ADD, continue working on something after they become bored. In the case of depression, medication allows people to, through conciling or whatever, come to terms with whatever trauma instigated their depression and deal with it.

    However, both are frequently mis-diagnosed, largely by non-professionals because a normal person may exhibit many of the same symptoms, but without the chemical imbalance. I have known several people with ADD, to whom Ritalin was a godsend. This contributes to the overperscription, because to the people genuinely afflicted, it is a miracle drug.

    Many bright children, in particular, are mis-diagnosed as having ADD by teachers who notice that they don't pay attention. In many cases this is because the students are so far ahead of the teachers that they might as well be in their own world. Or, they give up on waiting for the rest of the class to catch up, and start reading (this is what I always did). The solution to this is to seperate students out by learning speeds and teach them differently. However, this is usually criticized as elitism and unfair. I went to 1-4 at a school that did that kind of tracking (well, they started in 3rd grade, I think), and 5-8 in a system that was only concerned with brining each student up to "state norms", and I can say without a doubt that what is totally unfair is to refuse to teach each student at the rate they want and are able to learn.
  • And perhaps not coincidently, Ritalin is a CNS (central nervous system) stimulent. For the layman, you might consider it an extremely potent form of coffee: it jives you up. For the junkies, you might compare it to amphetamines.

    Ironically, it seems to have a calming effect on some people. The mechanism is unknown, mainly because no one really knows what causes ADHD.

    It is entirely possible that the guy you knew had been mis-prescribed.

    --
  • Sure, video games can help a 6-year-old remember all 150 Pokemon and learn to count to 150... but beyond that, what good is it going to teach him beyond "fire beats water"?

    And yes, that was sarcasm... we all know water should beat fire... that's part of my point. Sure, you can memorize every map on Final Fantasy II, but can you find your way form Boston to Seattle?
  • The point of this isn't just prediction/goal seeking/concentration.

    The brainwaves of these kids are measured and used to make the controls to the games more or less responsive. The only reason they use video games is because it's a tedious process where kids have a tendency to get bored.

  • by jafac ( 1449 )
    We got a call from the admins at my son's school. Seems he was causing disturbances again. Seems he was unable to pay attention to the work at hand. Seems they think he needs to go on Ritalin (never mind getting to a doctor and having him diagnosed).

    we took him to a doctor. The doctor did not test him. He simply asked; "is your son able to pay attention to video games?" To which we emphatically replied "yes."
    "then your son does NOT need to go on Ritalin, and does NOT have ADD or ADHD".

    duh.

    if it ain't broke, then fix it 'till it is!
  • by Slynkie ( 18861 ) <jsalit&slunk,net> on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:23AM (#827564) Homepage
    I don't think that the value of this lies in 'fixing' ADD (although I won't deny that it's probably what some people do have in mind, sadly..).

    My experience/outlook on it is this. ADD and ADHD kids, by definition, have problems with attention spans. Having previously worked in a computer lab for children who are disabled/handicapped/ADD + ADHD/other various distresses, I can say with confidence that computers in general are of -huge- benefit in these cases, especially with ADD/ADHD. Kids who would normally be off the wall could come in to the lab, sit down in front of a computer for hours upon hours, and play educational games, draw, have fun, etc...without hardly ever losing their attention. Because of computers, whole worlds of education and fun are being opened up for kids who would, 15 years ago, be merely chastised and termed "stupid" (I know this as well, because it happened to someone close to me. It wasn't until he was in his 2nd year of college that he finally got the recognition of his disorder that he needed to successfully learn. Previously, he had merely been thought to be of a lower level of intelligence; now, because he was recognized to have ADHD, and in addition took a liking to computers, he's making 6 digits and is quite a reputable employee.)...

    My point is, the mainstream realization of this can have profoundly positive affects on the ADD/ADHD community, and I'm all for it.
  • It's not actually the video games that give the effect that this article explores. The video game is just one way to apply the biofeedback. I've actually participated in something similar to this, only less fun. I had a couple leads attached to my head and a computer screen showing my brain wave spectrum.

    Apparently, a certain part of that spectrum is the part that is associated with the difficulty concentrating that characterizes ADD. If a person (me) is able to look at the specific part of the brain wave spectrum, and see that when that type of brain activity increases, with the increase causing the computer to emit an annoying tone, the person can, after a little practice, actually control those specific brain waves to a large degree, and thereby avoid the annoying tone. Eventually, it becomes almost unconscious, like second nature, and suppressing the undesirable waves becomes automatic, more or less.

    Looks like the difference between that, and the technique in the article, is that the video game is able to provide both negative(bad control) *and* positive(good control) feedback, rather than just negative.

    In any case, watching your own brainwaves and changing them with conscious effort is trippy as hell, to say the least.

    The equipment necessary for the sort of biofeedback therapy I received wasn't really that complex/expensive, either, seems like this stuff could be almost mass-produced and maybe prescribed/sent home and installed on a home computer.

    I say, break out the biofeedback videogames!

  • by MattLesko ( 155081 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:04AM (#827569)
    While the careful calibration of video-game feedback devices may be useful in 'fixing' ADD, it still gives the impression that 'hyperactive' kids are somehow bad and need to be cured. Some of the best and brightest people I know have ADD and to think of their curiosity and their mind being 'cured' is disconcerting, to say the least. This country is quickly sliding down into a carefully controlled society, with very little deviation from the 'standard' allotted.
    Perhaps if our society had less influences from corporate behemonths selling soundbites to our children, we could see some real improvement.

    You are more than the sum of what you consume.
  • Drug free school zone!
    Ritalin dropoff in rear.

    Seriously that's not funny. We have a major drug abuse problem and It's NOT those who decide to do drugs like weed and cocaine.

    it's RITALIN!

  • Only in America. Ritalin is over-prescribed, IMO, in Canada, too.


    --
  • I've read a lot of research which says that video games help cause ADD. Now they research that it causes it. I wonder if a different criteria was used perhaps, such as the person paying attention to the video game (in this study), and the person paying attention to other stimuli and people (other studies), the later being what I would prefer them research - lets face it, in the grand scheme of things, it dosen't really matter if you concentrate on a video game.

  • by Elvis Maximus ( 193433 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:05AM (#827578) Homepage

    If only this article came out in 1982 when my parents didn't want me to play Atari...

    -

  • by ceswiedler ( 165311 ) <chris@swiedler.org> on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:05AM (#827580)
    "Langley Research Center"... does anyone else find this suspicious?

    "We're just testing to see how children playing video games helps ADD. What are the games? Well, for one, the kids pretend to fly little robotic cameras around the Chinese embassy. Another is called "Cracking the Keys of the Evil Doctor P. G. P." Really fun stuff. Oh, and yeah, it helps their ADD."
  • I wonder how a RTS game would have helped him.
  • Okay. You have a point. I guess Desert Storm/Shield made really good /business/ sense. Maybe I should have said that we had no /right/ to be there. I dunno. America was built on the backs of slaves and by waging war against the rightful dwellers in this country (the Native Americans.) And here we were telling the world that Sadam was Evil because he dared to try and expand his nation through the suffereing of others? Give me a break. If North American belonged to the Native American's today, nothing would stop the government from annexing their lands... and they would get we, the public, to support it. But... My God! What does this have to do with video games?
  • A lot of people I know (myself included) were diagnosed in elementrary school with ADD, and I kind of felt "why is this a problem?" But then I got to know my college roommate. He's a brilliantly creative and very funny guy. But he has ADD and when he forgets to take his medication, he is basically unable to do the things he wants, and finds basically everyday life very furstrating.

    I think that ADD is very much overdiagnosed, to make kids easier for their parents or teachers to deal with, but there are cases in which ADD is a real problem for some of these kids.

  • Yeah, seriously - without starting a flamewar - anything has got to be better than just putting kids on dope.(I'm not condemming parents who use Ritalin - I'm just saying, developing new treatments is a good thing).

    As someone who was put on Ritalin briefly as a child (and vividly recall how the beauty and luster of the world was drained as a result, replaced by a torpid and colorless place one wouldn't recognize), I do blame parents for doping up their children. A little dietary change (hint: avoid artificial colorings and preservatives), a litte attention, and a little breathing room to play do (and did) wonders.

    It is very indicative of just how degenerate and selfish our society has become, that parents routinely drug their children to achieve desirable behavior, then turn around and drug themselves with prozac, caffein, or alcohol to fill the emptiness of their own sorry existence. All the while condemning users of other, alternative chemicals and waging a war on their lifestyles that is consting all of us our most fundamental rights.

    How soon before we have a pill for those suffering from Consumerist Assimulation Disorder (read: those unwilling to mindlessly consume and not talk back)? Credzac, anyone (free with a $25 purchase applied to your new Visa or MasterCard, limited time offer, hurry now!)
  • ....it came from a doctor in Alaska(?)

    Basically you have a bunch of kids sitting in desks flipping out. The doctor walks in, smacks the first kid upside the head and yells "Sit down, shut up, and study!!"

    Same thing is done to the next kid. The third kid is already quiet (in shock of someone telling him what to do) and reading.

    Discipline works a lot better drugs. Giving kids a free head and *expecting* them to want and sit quiet and learn is asking for anarchy. If you love your child enough to give them drugs, do you love them enough to smack 'em upside the head?
    --
  • Foo! Where was this kind of research when I needed it..er..uh..

    Sure, I can pay attention to video games. I think the word is addiction.

    "I see your little Nivlem is able to pay attention to something for more than 20 minutes, wonderful!"

    "Yes, but then we have to unplug it to get him away from it."

    Well, perhaps with the right parental supervision. Supervising the parents, that is ;-)

    Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
  • by jonbrewer ( 11894 ) on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:38AM (#827598) Homepage
    An article ran in the Hartford Courant several months on this exact topic... covered in greater depth than today's link. Here's a quote:
    To train the brain, psychologists at the clinic attach a sensor slathered with conducting gel to a patient's head. The sensor records the brain waves in the frontal lobe, the part of the brain that controls attention and the area where slow-moving waves are believed to cause ADHD.

    Patients' brains are then wired to a video game. Instead of a joystick, a mouse or a keyboard, they use brain waves to control the game.

    And here's a link: Rocket Science For ADHD [ctnow.com].
  • Oh, I see.

    So you would rather the owners of the franchises get all the money?

    There is a tremendous amount of revenue generated. It's only fair that players get their cut, regardless of if it's thousands or millions. It's not a situation where if the athlete only made 100K, you could hire X more teachers. That's just more money in the pockets of the team owners.

    • The brainwaves of children playing the games are monitored and used to calibrate the performance of the joystick or gamepad being used to play the game.

      When the children produce the right sort of brainwaves the joystick becomes more responsive reinforcing the behaviour.

    Bzzzzzzzzztttttt!

    That's right, electo-shock therapy to cure people of being crap at sonic the hedgehog :-)
    I like it.

    • In America, increasing numbers of children are being treated for ADD and many doctors are prescribing drugs such as Ritalin to calm them down and help them expand their attention span.

      Earlier this year the annual report of the International Narcotics Control Board found that, in some American schools, up to 40% of children in a class were being given Ritalin.

    Yeah, seriously - without starting a flamewar - anything has got to be better than just putting kids on dope. (I'm not condemming parents who use Ritalin - I'm just saying, developing new treatments is a good thing).
    Makes the war on drugs seem a bit silly.

    G

  • I've seen kids many times that have ADD, and can't keep their mind focused on anything. However, sit them in front of Final Fantasy and they won't stop playing.

    It's because videogames have the imagery of being FUN. Now, if we could use this knowledge and have the ADD kids use edutainment that has the imagery of being FUN, they can learn just as fast, if not faster, than the other kids.

    Some people I've known with ADD are really smart. Even I have a very mild case of ADD. Make something fun, and we'll pay attention.
  • The lengthening of attention span and calming effect of playing the game persists long after the treatment is finished

    They obviously aren't talking about Quake III, which leaves me as wired as a couple of 20 oz. Mountain Dews. In the words of Arlo Guthrie, "Kill! Kill! Kill!"

    I wonder if ADD afflicted children are more susceptible to the siezures sometimes caused by video games?

  • by Nidhogg ( 161640 ) <shr.thanatosNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday August 25, 2000 @11:07AM (#827609) Journal
    My nephew is slightly autistic with ADD. When he was much younger there was no communicating with the child. None whatsoever. It was very frustrating for his parents and him.

    Luckily though, my brother (his father), like me, is a big computer/console game junkie. He discovered early on that my nephew not only would play the games but actually excelled at them in a savant kind of way. God knows he kicked MY ass enough times on N64.

    But what this did was provide the child with an avenue for communication. Some of these games were fairly difficult and he needed to ask someone how to get past a part. Now I'm not sure that's what they mean here but ANY avenue in that situation is really a blessing in disguise.

    He gets better daily. I still remember the day he initiated a conversation and called me "Uncle". It gave me that warm, gushy feeling.

    I've always scoffed at the supposed evil of video games. It's nice to see some scientific evidence saying the same.

All seems condemned in the long run to approximate a state akin to Gaussian noise. -- James Martin

Working...