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Education Entertainment Games

Cognitive Benefits of Gaming 12

Next Generation reports on an upcoming study to be conducted by PopCap games and the Games for Health Project. The two groups will be collaborating to discover what effect, if any, gaming has on keeping minds sharp. From the article: "The results of the study, which should be available in Spring of this year, are expected to reveal the role that digital games play in keeping minds sharp, especially those of the aging. The study will not focus on the benefits of any specific game, as the overall goal is to summarize past and present research. Expert opinions or public opinion may be gathered as well."
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Cognitive Benefits of Gaming

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  • I'm not trying to flame here, but this appears to be a group conducting a 'study' to get the results they want. If this were a Seattle based organization I suspect the /. response would be quite negative.

    And just to show I'm not an anti-gamer I loved the Dark Forces/Jedi Knight/Jedi Academy series, the Thief series and am currently playing Age of Empires 3.

    I'm just saying I don't like studies where the entire purpose is to get a pre-determined result.
    • Any experiment has something you are seeking to prove. Of course, you can fail to prove it.

      The second definition of hypothesis (from dictionary.com): Something taken to be true for the purpose of argument or investigation; an assumption.
      • So there should be no complaints when Microsoft funds a study to show that Linux has a higher TCO and the results are surprisingly on Microsofts side?

        Your argument is correct if it is a scientific experiment. This is PR for the sake of PR. And like the Microsoft studies, the results will be designed, not observed.
    • Any experiment has something you are seeking to prove. Of course, you can fail to prove it.

      This is absolutely incorrect, and the type of thinking that the parent was concerned about. An experiment simply tests a hypothesis - a scientist should never be seeking to 'prove or disprove' a hypothesis.

      • by Anonymous Coward
        Actually, philosophy (Popper) of scientific discovery strongly recommends that a scientist should always try to disprove their hypothesis. This is b/c it is impossible to prove the hypothesis true for every case (assuming the number of cases is infinite or very large as is most often the case in science). Therefore, a scientist can only falsify a hypothesis and should endeavour to do so. Once a hypothesis is falsified, it should be revised or discarded.

        Kuhnian philosophy suggests a strong inferential approa
  • Well, duh... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mjhacker ( 922395 ) <mjhacker@ g m ail.com> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @03:11PM (#14457450) Journal
    Any game, no matter what genre or style, which forces the gamer to think and act quickly is going to increase one's ability to think quicker, if not actually make the gamer more intelligent. In strategy games, they force a problem on you, and you must take a course of action to solve it. An excellent example is Chess. I doubt there are many out there that will tell you that Chess will make you dumber if you play it.
  • Research? (Score:3, Informative)

    by bateleur ( 814657 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @03:19PM (#14457533)
    From the article:
    "We know good games activate minds [...] The goal of this effort is to establish a baseline of knowledge - you'd think it exists but it really doesn't."

    So if I understand correctly they already know the results of their research, they just want the data to back their conclusion? Mmm... research! No wonder PopCap want to get involved.
  • I have 3 younger brothers still in Jr/Sr High School (I'm 27), that would love to show the results of this study to my mother.
  • Quotes from the news release:

    The jointly funded effort will result in a publicly available knowledge-base summarizing both the research and market development activities associated with the possible use of digital games for maintaining healthy minds.

    With an increasingly aging population in many developed countries the field of cognitive exercise is growing. Advocates of cognitive exercise say it is equally important for people to exercise their minds as well as their bodies. In Japan, a series of popula

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