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Social media is giving children mentality of three-year-olds, warns researcher


tao

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She claims that social media inhibits one's ability to think for themselves

 

Social media is having an adverse effect on the mental and emotional maturity of children, a leading neuroscientist has warned, leaving them with the behavioural habits of three-year-olds.

 

Baroness Susan Greenfield, former director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, told The Daily Telegraph that social media and video games have left children unable to communicate with one another and think for themselves, as they are constantly looking for something to distract them.

 

“What I predict is that people are going to be like three-year-olds: emotional, risk-taking, poor social skills, weak self-identity and short attention spans,” she said.

 

Greenfield, who is also a senior research fellow at the University of Oxford, supported her claims by citing a study from 2014 conducted by psychologists at Virginia and Harvard Universities which found that students would prefer to give themselves a mild electric shock than to be left alone to think without distractions for 10 minutes.

 

She said that the study suggests people need “constant stimulation from their environment every single moment” and implies that they are no longer able to be left to contemplate their own thoughts.

 

This can be particularly detrimental for children, with Greenfield suggesting that parents promote activities such as gardening, sports and reading as a way to reduce screen time and stimulate their imaginations.

 

Digital detox expert and author Tanya Goodin also claims that reducing use of digital devices could offer significant benefits to children.

 

“I couldn’t agree more with Baroness Greenfield,” she tells The Independent.

 

“A study from UCLA found that children who had all digital devices removed from them for a week were better able to read non-verbal communication in others than a group of children who carried on using screens.

 

“When you think about what an important skill reading body language is for life, work, school and relationships, then alarm bells do start to ring on some of the long-term implications of screen over-use.”

 

Greenfield’s comments come four years after she claimed that new advancements in digital technology were rewiring children’s brains in her book, Mind Change.

 

In the book, she claims that children who used social media and played on digital tablets were more likely to suffer from depression and low self-esteem in addition to becoming more narcissistic.

 

Such concerns were recently echoed by a group of US child welfare experts, who wrote a letter in January to Mark Zuckerberg, urging the Facebook founder to remove Messenger Kids - a communications app aimed specifically at children.

 

The letter lambasted the app as “harmful” and “irresponsible”, citing studies which have linked social media use amongst children and teenagers to poor mental wellbeing.

 

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10 hours ago, tao said:

This can be particularly detrimental for children, with Greenfield suggesting that parents promote activities such as gardening, sports and reading as a way to reduce screen time and stimulate their imaginations.

 

Obviously, Social Media is NOT FOR CHILDREN and this is not news. Kids should be banned from using them! Age limit should be at least 15 years old! Obviously, the use of social media by children is responsibility of parental care. My opinion is that main argument should not be properly related to mental wellbeing but SECURITY.

The problem is that to ban the use of social media is day by day harder, with the more extended use of smartphones among kids. Just as an example, my neighbour's 9 years old daughter is using an iPhone. (Who gave her the iPhone and why?)  Of course, parents can delete social media apps but on the other hands, kids feel as a very serious breach of privacy when parents check their phones!

 

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8 hours ago, luisam said:

 

Obviously, Social Media is NOT FOR CHILDREN and this is not news. Kids should be banned from using them! Age limit should be at least 15 years old! Obviously, the use of social media by children is responsibility of parental care. My opinion is that main argument should not be properly related to mental wellbeing but SECURITY.

The problem is that to ban the use of social media is day by day harder, with the more extended use of smartphones among kids. Just as an example, my neighbour's 9 years old daughter is using an iPhone. (Who gave her the iPhone and why?)  Of course, parents can delete social media apps but on the other hands, kids feel as a very serious breach of privacy when parents check their phones!

 

I think the article emphasizes on how social media affects mature/adult, grown up man, rather than the effects on the children. Though, what you wrote is indeed true.

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3 hours ago, x3r0 said:

I think the article emphasizes on how social media affects mature/adult, grown up man, rather than the effects on the children. Though, what you wrote is indeed true.

 

I guess you misunderstood something. It's quite clear that this article "warns" that social media is giving children mentality of three-year-olds, quote: "leaving them with the behavioural habits of three-year-olds".  Somehow, I feel that this "affirmation" is rather exagereted but I don't wish to enter in useless discussions over psychological themes. With my answer I only mean to share some commonplace facts about the excessively extended participation in social media and the wrong use of smartphones by too underaged kids.

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1 hour ago, luisam said:

useless discussions over psychological themes

Although what is not seen, some call it mind, is a powerful force.  It controls all discussions (labels them useless or useful) all biases, all fights, and also all kindness and peacefulness.  Psychology is an attempt to understand its working.  There is nothing wrong with an observation, which by itself doesn't lead to any unwanted discussions.  Like observations discussions are also a facet of the same mind.

 

Thank you for your comments @Luisam.  :flowers:

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I feel like the network effect caused lately on the Internet, has deteriorated its quality in general. Looking across services like Facebook, Twitter you can see how this has become true.

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