(Press-News.org) Parents, turn off the television when your children are with you. And when you do let them watch, make sure the programs stimulate their interest in learning.
That's the advice arising from University of Iowa researchers who examined the impact of television and parenting on children's social and emotional development. The researchers found that background television—when the TV is on in a room where a child is doing something other than watching—can divert a child's attention from play and learning. It also found that non-educational programs can negatively affect children's cognitive development.
"Kids are going to learn from whatever you put in front of them," says Deborah Linebarger, associate professor in education at the UI and the lead author on the study, published online in the Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics. "So what kinds of messages, what kinds of things do you want them to learn? That would be the kinds of media you'd purposefully expose them to."
The findings come from a national survey of more than 1,150 families with children between 2 and 8 years old. Linebarger and her team looked at family demographics, parenting styles, media use, and how those factors could impact kids' future success.
The team found a relationship between the content children are exposed to and their executive function, an important facet in learning and development. This was especially true among children in families she identified as "high risk"—in families living in poverty or families whose parents have little education, for example. Yet even kids in high-risk families who watched educational television saw increases in executive function, the researchers found.
Regardless of family demographics, parenting can act as a buffer against the impacts of background TV, Linebarger's team found.
"Children whose parents create a home environment that is loving and nurturing and where rules and expectations are the same from one time to another are better able to control their behavior, display more empathy, and do better academically," she says.
In particular, Linebarger suggests that parents be mindful what their children view on the tube, especially the content of a show.
"Sit down to watch a particular show and when it's done, turn it off," she says.
In an earlier study, Linbarger and other UI researchers found that children, on average, are exposed to nearly four hours of background TV per day. Among the impacts of background TV, researchers say, is it recruits kids' attention away from other activities, such as play and learning.
INFORMATION:
The paper is titled, "Associations between parenting, media use, cumulative risk, and children's executive functioning." Contributing authors include Rachel Barr of Georgetown University, Matthew Lapierre of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, and Jessica Taylor Piotrowski of the University of Amsterdam.
The US Department of Education, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and the
Public Broadcasting System for the Ready to Learn Initiative funded the study.
Background TV can be bad for kids
University of Iowa study shows link between TV programming and children's learning and development
2014-07-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Wireless home automation systems reveal more than you would think about user behavior
2014-07-24
This news release is available in German.
Home automation systems that control domestic lighting, heating, window blinds or door locks offer opportunities for third parties to intrude on the privacy of the inhabitants and gain considerable insight into their behavioral patterns. This is the conclusion reached by IT security expert Christoph Sorge and his research team at Saarland University. Even data transmitted from encrypted systems can provide information useful to potential burglars. Professor Sorge, who holds the juris Professorship in Legal Informatics ...
Natural products from plants protect skin during cancer radiotherapy
2014-07-24
Radiotherapy for cancer involves exposing the patient or their tumor more directly to ionizing radiation, such as gamma rays or X-rays. The radiation damages the cancer cells irreparably. Unfortunately, such radiation is also harmful to healthy tissue, particularly the skin over the site of the tumor, which is then at risk of hair loss, dermatological problems and even skin cancer. As such finding ways to protect the overlying skin are keenly sought.
Writing in the International Journal of Low Radiation, Faruck Lukmanul Hakkim of the University of Nizwa, Oman and Nagasaki ...
Identified a key molecule in flies that adjusts energy use under starvation conditions
2014-07-24
Most scientific literature devoted to the protein p53 refers to cancer biology, and the functions of this molecule as a tumour suppressor have been described in detail. Furthermore, also in cancer biology, it is known that p53 inhibits the metabolic pathways of tumour cells in order to block their metabolism and prevent their rapid growth and proliferation.
The most innovative research on p53 attempts to unveil its functions in the management of energy stores and nutrients in healthy cells. Recent studies with cell cultures have demonstrated that p53 is activated in response ...
Metastatic brain tumor treatment could be on the horizon with use of SapC-DOPS
2014-07-24
CINCINNATI -- Over half of patients being seen in the clinic for a diagnosed brain tumor have metastatic cancer, which has no treatment and detrimental outcomes in most cases.
However, a Cincinnati Cancer Center (CCC) study, published in the advance online edition of the journal Oncotarget, provides hope that previously studied SapC-DOPS could be used for treatment of brain cancer that has spread.
Xiaoyang Qi, PhD, member of the CCC, associate director and associate professor in the division of hematology oncology at the University of Cincinnati (UC) College of Medicine ...
Seeing the same GP at every visit will reduce emergency department attendance
2014-07-24
Attendances at emergency departments can be reduced by enabling patients to see the same GP every time they visit their doctor's surgery. This is just one of several recommendations made in a report published today, led by researchers at the University of Bristol.
Called 'Primary care factors and unscheduled secondary care: a series of systematic reviews', the report has been compiled by researchers from the University's Centre for Academic Primary Care who looked at evidence from studies around the world. They found that patients who saw the same GP every time they attended ...
New research: When it hurts to think we were made for each other
2014-07-24
Toronto - Aristotle said, "Love is composed of a single soul inhabiting two bodies." Poetic as it is, thinking that you and your partner were made in heaven for each other can hurt your relationship, says a new study.
Psychologists observe that people talk and think about love in apparently limitless ways but underlying such diversity are some common themes that frame how we think about relationships. For example, one popular frame considers love as perfect unity ("made for each other," "she's my other half"); in another frame, love is a journey ("look how far we've ...
Four billion-year-old chemistry in cells today
2014-07-24
Parts of the primordial soup in which life arose have been maintained in our cells today according to scientists at the University of East Anglia.
Research published today in the Journal of Biological Chemistry reveals how cells in plants, yeast and very likely also in animals still perform ancient reactions thought to have been responsible for the origin of life – some four billion years ago.
The primordial soup theory suggests that life began in a pond or ocean as a result of the combination of metals, gases from the atmosphere and some form of energy, such as a lightning ...
Western Indian Ocean communities play vital role in conservation
2014-07-24
An international team of researchers led by the University of York has carried out the first assessment of community-led marine conservation in the Western Indian Ocean.
The results, reported in the journal PLOS ONE, point to a revolution in the management of marine protected areas, with almost half of the sites – more than 11,000 km² – in the region now under local community stewardship.
Marine protected areas (MPAs) are zones of the seas and coasts designed to protect wildlife from damage and disturbance and managed typically by governments rather than by local communities. ...
Melatonin reduces traumatic brain injury-induced oxidative stress
2014-07-24
Traumatic brain injury can cause post-traumatic neurodegenerations with an increase in reactive oxygen species and reactive oxygen species-mediated lipid peroxidation. Melatonin, a non-enzymatic antioxidant and neuroprotective agent, has been shown to counteract oxidative stress-induced pathophysiologic conditions like cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury, neuronal excitotoxicity and chronic inflammation. Therefore, the research team at the Neuroscience Research Center, University of Suleyman Demire, led by Prof. Mustafa Nazıroğlu, aimed to evaluate whether there ...
Cost-effective, solvothermal synthesis of heteroatom (S or N)-doped graphene developed
2014-07-24
A research team led by group leader Yung-Eun Sung has announced that they have developed cost-effective technology to synthesize sulfur-doped and nitrogen-doped graphenes which can be applied as high performance electrodes for secondary batteries and fuel cells. Yung-Eun Sung is both a group leader at the Center for Nanoparticle Research at Institute for Basic Science* (IBS) and a professor at the Seoul National University.
This achievement has great significance with regards to the development of relative simplicity, scalablity, and cost effectiveness processes that ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
More Americans, especially Black adults, are dying before they can access Medicare benefits
Death Valley plant reveals blueprint for building heat-resilient crops
Racial disparities in premature mortality and unrealized Medicare benefits across US states
Heat- and cold-related mortality burden in the US from 2000 to 2020
Research hints at the potential of pain relief with CBD
Dr. Johnson V. John appointed as a Standing Member of the NIH Musculoskeletal Tissue Engineering (MTE) Study Section
TCF/LEF transcription factors emerge as druggable targets in Wnt signaling, offering new hope for fibrosis and cancer therapies
New alloy design could power solid-state batteries that charge faster and last longer
Discovery to display: FAU unveils the ‘Art of Science’ winners
Achieving electrocatalytic activity toward oxygen reduction reaction based on Ruddlesden-Popper type cathode catalyst for solid oxide fuel cells
Ceramic-based electromagnetic interference shielding materials: mechanisms, optimization strategies, and pathways to next-generation applications
NIH-funded exploratory study to seek possible targets for treating alcohol use disorder
Hanyang University researchers develop of novel high-resolution mechanoluminescent platform technology
Hidden HPV-linked cell type may drive early cervical cancer, scientists report
Metros cut car use in European cities, but trams fall short
Antarctic ice melt triggers further melting: Evidence for cascading feedbacks 9,000 years ago
Colorectal cancer evades immunotherapy using a dual barrier
MIT research finds particles that enhance mRNA delivery could reduce vaccine dosage and costs
Enhancing ocean wind observation accuracy: New rain correction approach for FY-3E WindRAD
New immobilization strategy enables reliable surface plasmon resonance analysis of membrane proteins
Single organic molecule triggers Kondo effect in molecular-scale “Kondo box”
Drug toxicity predicted by differences between preclinical models and humans
Behind the numbers: The growing mental health crisis among international students in America
Radiative coupled evaporation cooling hydrogel for above‑ambient heat dissipation and flame retardancy
Constructing double heterojunctions on 1T/2H‑MoS2@Co3S4 electrocatalysts for regulating Li2O2 formation in lithium‑oxygen batteries
Massively parallel implementation of nonlinear functions using an optical processor
Electrohydrodynamics pump and machine learning enable portable, high-performance excimer laser
UniSA leads national pilot to improve medication safety in aged care
Engineered biochar emerges as a powerful, affordable tool to combat water pollution
City of Hope appoints leading lung cancer expert Dr. Christine M. Lovly to head national thoracic oncology program
[Press-News.org] Background TV can be bad for kidsUniversity of Iowa study shows link between TV programming and children's learning and development



