New research following children for more than a decade links high screen exposure before age two to accelerated brain maturation, slower decision-making, and increased anxiety by adolescence.
High levels of screen time before age two is linked to slower decision-making at age 8 and higher levels of anxiety by ...
Children with higher infant screen time showed earlier maturation of brain networks linked to visual processing and cognitive control. The researchers suggested that intense, highly stimulating screen ...
Toddlers who spend hours in front of a screen are more likely to suffer anxiety issues as teenagers, warns new research. Long ...
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Fascinating new neuroscience model predicts intelligence by mapping the brain’s internal clocks
A new study suggests that the brain processes information with high efficiency by synchronizing the physical wiring of neural ...
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Infant screen time linked to slower cognitive processing and teen anxiety
Children exposed to high levels of screen time before age two showed changes in brain development that were linked to slower ...
The study, published in The Lancet’s eBioMedicine open access journal, tracked 168 children for more than a decade and ...
Early research ties word-finding difficulty (WFD) to the same neural highways that falter in Alzheimer’s disease.
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