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Writer's picture Dr. Daniel Herlihy

Digital Dementia

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Susan Greenfield Ph.D.

Digital Dementia

Video games improve attention, but is there also a link with dementia?

Posted Jul 01, 2015

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Dementia’ is a term sadly all too familiar these days, as instances soar of Alzheimer’s disease and other comparable conditions all characterized by confusion, disorientation, and impaired memory—literally a ‘loss of mind.’ However, the notion that an analogous state might be linked to the screen lifestyle is as controversial as it is potentially troubling.

“Digital Dementia” is a term coined by neuroscientist Manfred Spitzer to describe an overuse of digital technology resulting in the breakdown of cognitive abilities.1 Spitzer proposes that short-term memory pathways will start to deteriorate from underuse if we overuse technology. Although, in this blog, we have recently explored outsourcing your memory to smartphones, these two concepts are different—the mental disarray within the brain implied by the term ‘dementia’ is far more basic and complete. An under-practiced memory process is far from being comparable to the wider cognitive devastation that is dementia.

Perhaps a potentially more informative line of enquiry would be to explore the wider ways in which the screen lifestyle could induce states analogous to dementia. For example, new research has found a potential link between action video gaming and the potential increased risk for developing psychological disorders, including dementia.2 Researchers set out to investigate how action video gamers and non-video gamers navigated a virtual maze, using one of two potential strategies. The spatial strategy involves remembering the location of various landmarks within the environment and mentally building a map of these locations and their position relative to each other.3 Establishing relationships between landmarks allows for flexibility when navigating the world, as you are able to orientate yourself within your mental map. This particular strategy relies on a familiar area of the brain long associated with spatial memory: the hippocampus.

The response strategy, by contrast, entails learning the series of movements that follow from a set position, such as a certain pattern of left and right turns after seeing a particular landmark. Whereas the spatial strategy enables you to determine a direct path to any location, the response strategy is rigid in this regard as it relies on a series of movements triggered specifically by certain locations, and presses into service a different area of the brain, the striatum.3 The researchers found that video gamers were more likely to navigate the virtual maze using the response strategy.


Caine digital dementia!

Perhaps the crucial question then is whether rigid yet efficient ‘response strategies,’ or the more flexible ability to make connections, are more important for the optimal cognitive tool kit—and indeed whether such a simple dichotomy can indeed encapsulate the impairments embraced by the single term ‘dementia.’ 

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