媒介接触对儿童注意力和执行功能短期影响的meta分析综述

IF 3.2 1区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Ashley E. Hinten, Damian Scarf, Kana Imuta
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,人们一直担心屏幕媒体对儿童认知发展的影响。特别是,快节奏和幻想事件被认为会耗尽儿童的认知资源,导致他们的注意力和执行功能(EF)的降低。然而,到目前为止,关于媒体速度和幻想对儿童认知的短期影响的实证测试得出了不同的结果。在本研究中,我们对先前的研究结果进行了荟萃分析,综合了媒体暴露后儿童注意力和EF的影响,包括速度(19项研究,涉及141个效应量,基于1431名1.5至10岁儿童)和幻想(16项研究,涉及121个效应量,基于1297名1.5至6岁儿童)。总体而言,我们的研究结果显示媒体速度不影响儿童的认知(d = -0.123, 95% CI [-0.331, 0.086], p = 0.23)。相比之下,媒体幻想被发现有负面影响,其中观看幻想媒体的儿童在观看后立即在注意力和EF任务上表现较差(d = -0.244, 95% CI [-0.442, -0.046], p = 0.02)。然而,对节奏(95% PI[-1.100, 0.854])和幻想(95% PI[-1.120, 0.632])的影响存在很大的异质性,这表明媒体暴露对儿童认知产生不同影响的条件是复杂的——在某些情况下是消极的,在其他情况下是积极的,或者根本没有影响。在被测试的调节因子中,我们的发现指向了被测试的认知方面(注意力、认知灵活性、高阶EF、抑制控制、工作记忆)对短期媒体暴露效应强度的影响。对先前19项研究结果的综合荟萃分析显示,媒体速度对儿童注意力和执行功能的短期影响没有一致的模式。荟萃分析涉及16项研究,研究了媒体幻想的影响,结果显示,与现实媒体相比,儿童在观看完幻想媒体后的认知表现更差。在一项研究中观察到的媒体暴露对儿童观看后认知表现的影响必须根据研究的方法来考虑。我们的研究结果表明,复杂的环境因素相互作用,决定了屏幕媒体如何促进和阻碍儿童的发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Meta-Analytic Review of the Short-Term Effects of Media Exposure on Children's Attention and Executive Functions

Meta-Analytic Review of the Short-Term Effects of Media Exposure on Children's Attention and Executive Functions

There are long-held concerns regarding the impact of screen media on children's cognitive development. In particular, fast pace and fantastical events have been theorized to deplete children's cognitive resources, leading to reductions in their attention and executive functions (EF). To date, however, empirical tests of short-term effects of media pace and fantasy on children's cognition have yielded mixed findings. In the present study, we conducted meta-analytic syntheses of previous findings on the impact of pace (19 studies involving 141 effect sizes based on 1431 1.5- to 10-year-olds) and fantasy (16 studies involving 121 effect sizes based on 1297 1.5- to 6-year-olds) on children's attention and EF immediately after media exposure. Overall, our findings revealed that media pace does not affect children's cognition (d = –0.123, 95% CI [–0.331, 0.086], p = 0.23). In contrast, media fantasy was found to have a negative effect, wherein children who watched fantastical media compared to realistic media performed worse on attention and EF tasks immediately post-viewing (d = –0.244, 95% CI [–0.442, –0.046], p = 0.02). The large heterogeneity in effects for both pace (95% PI [–1.100, 0.854]) and fantasy (95% PI [–1.120, 0.632]), however, points to the complexity in conditions under which media exposure differentially impacts children's cognition—in some cases, negatively, in others positively, or not at all. Of the moderators tested, our findings point to the influence of facet of cognition examined (attention, cognitive flexibility, higher order EF, inhibitory control, working memory) on the strength of short-term media exposure effect.

Summary

  • Meta-analytic synthesis of previous findings from 19 studies showed no consistent pattern of short-term impact of media pace on children's attention and executive functions.
  • Meta-analysis involving 16 studies that examined the effect of media fantasy revealed children's cognitive performance is worse immediately after viewing fantastical compared to realistic media.
  • The influence of media exposure on children's post-viewing cognitive performance observed in a study must be considered in light of the study's methodology.
  • Our findings suggest the complexity of contextual factors that interact to determine how screen media can both promote and hinder children's development.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
8.10%
发文量
132
期刊介绍: Developmental Science publishes cutting-edge theory and up-to-the-minute research on scientific developmental psychology from leading thinkers in the field. It is currently the only journal that specifically focuses on human developmental cognitive neuroscience. Coverage includes: - Clinical, computational and comparative approaches to development - Key advances in cognitive and social development - Developmental cognitive neuroscience - Functional neuroimaging of the developing brain
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