AI Article Synopsis

  • Action video games are shown to improve perceptual and cognitive skills, but the reasons for this transfer of skills are not fully understood.
  • Participants in the study played four different action games with varying levels of speed, visual, and attentional challenges over 20 hours.
  • Those who played the game with the highest demands, "Modern Combat," improved more notably on tasks involving attentional blink and managing multiple items, supporting the idea that transfer of skills is linked to the specific demands of the games played.

Article Abstract

Despite increasing evidence that shows action video game play improves perceptual and cognitive skills, the mechanisms of transfer are not well-understood. In line with previous work, we suggest that transfer is dependent upon common demands between the game and transfer task. In the current study, participants played one of four action games with varying speed, visual, and attentional demands for 20 h. We examined whether training enhanced performance for attentional blink, selective attention, attending to multiple items, visual search and auditory detection. Non-gamers who played the game (Modern Combat) with the highest demands showed transfer to tasks of attentional blink and attending to multiple items. The game (MGS Touch) with fewer attentional demands also decreased attentional blink, but to a lesser degree. Other games failed to show transfer, despite having many action game characteristics but at a reduced intensity. The results support the common demands hypothesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4322619PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00113DOI Listing

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