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Killing you keeps me young

Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2010 2:08 pm
by ru_exp
http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20100123/hl ... fightaging



Video Gaming Just Might Fight Aginghealthday Reporter – Fri Jan 22, 11:49 pm ET

FRIDAY, Jan. 22 (HealthDay News) -- Slaying orcs, charting military campaigns and gunning down bad guys might not sound like things seniors would be interested in pursuing for fun or exercise.


But they might want to start, some experts on aging say.


Research has found that off-the-shelf video games have the potential to help seniors age more gracefully, keeping their minds sharp and responsive through game play.


"There's a growing body of evidence that suggests playing video games actually can improve older adults' reflexes, processing speed, memory, attention skills and spatial abilities," said Jason Allaire, an associate professor of psychology at North Carolina State University and co-director of its Gains Through Gaming Lab.


With the advent of the Nintendo Wii, there's even the potential that video games could provide seniors with an outlet for physical exercise.


The Wii uses special controllers that require arm and body movements, and a number of games have been developed for the system specifically to provide an exercise program.


One study found that a Wii bowling game boosted the heart rate of players at a senior center in Pensacola, Fla., by about 40 percent. The game required that the players, who were in their 60s, 70s and 80s, hold the controller like a bowling ball and swing it to hit the pins in a virtual bowling alley.


"The Wii is a perfect vehicle because it is so easy," Allaire said. "It's in a lot of senior centers already. Older adults already tend to use it."


The potential of video games to keep minds sharp was highlighted in a 2008 study in which 40 people in their 60s and 70s were asked to play Rise of Nations, a real-time strategy game for computers that can be found in many stores that sell video games.


"We wanted to see whether we could take an off-the-shelf game and see fairly substantial changes," said Art Kramer, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who participated in the study.


Researchers measured the cognitive abilities of the players, none of whom had played any video games for at least two years. They then had half the group play Rise of Nations for nearly 24 hours total over an eight-week period.


Follow-up tests found that the seniors who played the strategy video game improved their performance on tests of memory, reasoning and cognition. There were particular improvements, Kramer said, in what's called executive control processes -- abilities such as planning, scheduling, dealing with ambiguity and multi-tasking.


"As we get older, we show declines in many of those abilities," he said. "As a result of doing certain things, we end up doing them less often. The kinds of processes that were exercised in the video game were some of the processes that older adults show deficits on."


Allaire is part of a team that has been given a $1.2 million grant from the National Science Foundation to do further research on whether and how video games can boost memory and thinking skills in the elderly.


The researchers plan to have seniors play a Wii game called Boom Blox that involves using weapons such as slingshots and cannonballs to demolish on-screen targets. The research will also involve World of Warcraft, an online role-playing game, Allaire said.


The plan is to assess three aspects of video game-playing that are thought to drive cognitive improvements in older people, Allaire said. They are:

Attentional demand. "You have to pay attention to what's going on on the screen and react quickly," he said. "The more attention you expend on the video game, the better you get at focusing your attention."
Novelty. "There's a lot of research that, when we're put in novel situations or are learning novel things, it activates our brains," he said.
Social interaction. "People who stay more socially engaged have more cognitive function," he said. "We think people will interact with each other through collaborating and playing the game."

Though the research efforts show the possibilities of using video games to help aging adults, Allaire noted that no studies have shown a transfer of video-game skills to real-world activities.


"Is it going to help you remember to take your medications, or to remember what you wanted to buy at the store?" he asked. "That really hasn't been proven."

Kramer said that seniors should consider video games one of a number of things they can do to keep themselves sharp.

"I would not suggest that video games would be the only or even the best way to exercise those cognitive functions," he said, noting that physical exercise, social interaction and diet are already proven ways to promote mental abilities as you get older. "I would recommend they get out and ride a bike. I would recommend they learn a new language."

Re: Killing you keeps me young

Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2010 5:37 pm
by CTC-JimRimya
Interesting article. So what exactly qualifies as a senior these days? 40+? LOL!

Video games blamed for return of rickets

Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2010 8:17 pm
by SMR
Video games blamed for return of rickets

http://news.cnet.com/8301-17852_3-10439333-71.html


There are a lot of things I would very much like to blame video games for.

I would like to blame them for making millions of people believe they really are great football coaches. I would like to blame them for turning millions of people into courgettes. And I would like to blame them for making far too many people believe that it really isn't hard out here for a pimp.

However, it had never crossed my mind that they could be blamed for the return of a disease that many of you might associate with Oliver Twist.

No, not the plague of painfully staged musical productions in regional theaters. Rickets.

The main cause of rickets is a lack of vitamin D. Children in developing countries can suffer greatly from it. It leads to a softening of their bones that can result in physical deformity. Yet, according to the Times of Oliver Twist's London, scientists are seeing a worrying return of rickets in UK children.

Professor Simon Pearce and consultant pediatrician Timothy Cheetham, wrote a paper in the British Medical Journal in which they suggested that rickets is becoming "disturbingly common" in the UK.

This nice man causes rickets? Surely not.
(Credit: CC Marcos Kontze/Flickr)

"Kids tend to stay indoors more these days and play on their computers instead of enjoying the fresh air. This means their vitamin D levels are worse than in previous years," Professor Pearce told the Times.

In olden times, they used to give kids cod liver oil to ensure that vitamin D levels were maintained. However, this practice smacks of Queen Victoria rather than Lady Gaga. So these scientists are recommending that everyday foods such as milk should be supplemented with vitamin D.

It could be that too many parents have already given up on the hope of being able to get their kids out of the house and into sunlight. And I know there is precious little sunlight in the U.K. anyway.

It seems fairly evident that kids listen very little to their parents these days anyway. So perhaps we should take the issue straight to the kids. Perhaps we could get them to care about vitamin D and nag their parents about it.

How about we talk the makers of Grand Theft Auto, World of Warcraft, and the rest into making versions in which characters with vitamin D deficiency are always, in one way or another, losers?

You know, they come last in races, never win the Superbowl and never, ever get to machete some bad dude's head into several even pieces. That might get the kids thinking, mightn't it?

Re: Killing you keeps me young

Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2010 8:21 pm
by SMR
CTC-JimRimya wrote:Interesting article. So what exactly qualifies as a senior these days? 40+? LOL!
55, but id say 65.

Retired people that sit at home all day, possibly alone, and often do not use their mind actively. I think 1 in 2 get some form of Dementia. Pretty much any activity at that age that actively uses your mind is a good thing.

Re: Killing you keeps me young

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:12 am
by ru_exp
SMR wrote:
CTC-JimRimya wrote:Interesting article. So what exactly qualifies as a senior these days? 40+? LOL!
55, but id say 65.

Retired people that sit at home all day, possibly alone, and often do not use their mind actively. I think 1 in 2 get some form of Dementia. Pretty much any activity at that age that actively uses your mind is a good thing.

OMG... :lol: :lol: :lol:

Re: Killing you keeps me young

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 3:31 am
by SMR
I know I know.......dumb post is dumb.

Just browsing before class started.

Re: Killing you keeps me young

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 3:53 am
by ru_exp
SMR wrote:I know I know.......dumb post is dumb.

Just browsing before class started.

I thought it was pretty funny man...unique to your sense of humor.

:mrgreen: