电影让我们更聪明吗?

T. Smith, Claire Essex, R. Bedford
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引用次数: 0

摘要

智商测试在上个世纪取得了巨大的进步,这被称为弗林效应。与此同时,社会在屏幕上花费的时间也大大增加和强化,例如,更短和更近的镜头,增加了叙事的复杂性。在《我们头脑中的电影》(2021)中,詹姆斯·卡廷提出了这两种效应之间潜在的双向联系:视觉处理能力的代际增长导致电影制作人提高了他们的电影对观众认知的要求,这反过来又训练了社会的视觉处理能力。在这篇评论中,我们回顾了这种积极联系的证据。有证据表明,屏幕时间的增加可能与更快的视觉处理有关,但也可能导致处理信息的能力下降(即执行功能下降)。此外,影响可能取决于屏幕体验的类型(例如,内容和交付平台的发展适当性,如TikTok)和其他环境考虑因素(例如,社会经济地位,养育子女),这表明影响我们不断发展的媒体/心灵利基的因素可能比最初提出的更复杂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are Movies Making Us Smarter?
IQ tests have charted massive gains over the last century, known as the Flynn Effect. Over the same period, the time society spends with screens has massively increased and intensified, for example, shorter and closer shots, increasing narrative complexity. In Movies on our Minds (2021), James Cutting suggests a potential bidirectional link between the two effects: generational increase in visual processing abilities led to movie makers increasing the demands their movies place on viewer cognition, which in turn has trained societal visual processing capacity. In this commentary we review the evidence for such a positive association. The evidence indicates that increasing screen time may be associated with faster visual processing but also a potentially decreased ability to process this information (i.e., reduced executive functions). Further, effects may be dependent on the type of screen experience (e.g., developmental appropriateness of content and delivery platform such as TikTok) and other environmental considerations (e.g., socioeconomic status, parenting), suggesting that the factors influencing our evolving media/mind niche may be more complex than originally proposed.
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