Video Games Found To Enhance Visual Attention 79
donniebaseball23 writes "Reporting on new research from WIREs Cognitive Science, IndustryGamers writes: 'Action games like Call of Duty and Halo can enhance visual attention, the ability that helps us focus on relevant visual information. The mental mechanism allows people to select pertinent visual information and ignore irrelevant information. It suggests that action titles can be used to augment military training, educational tools, and correct visual deficits.' Shawn Green, co-author of the study, commented, 'At the core of these action video game-induced improvements appears to be a remarkable enhancement in the ability to flexibly and precisely control attention, a finding that could have a variety of real-world applications. For example, those in professions that demand "super-normal" visual attention, such as fighter pilots, would benefit enormously from enhanced visual attention, as their performance and lives depend on their ability to react quickly and accurately to primarily visual information."
When I click on the enemy, (Score:3, Funny)
I hear "zug zug".
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Me not that kind of orc.
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Speaking of your sig... on a related note, if World War 1 was fought today, it might go something like this ... :-)
http://i171.photobucket.com/albums/u292/Mx_Paladin/Pictures/WWII.gif [photobucket.com]
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Thanks.
Yup, off-by-one, literally :-)
Who cares about action games? (Score:2, Interesting)
What about ANGBAND??? Surely the hours I've poured into that have improved me in some way? Surely???
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Surely by now you know better than to drink unidentified liquids.
(and to avoid lowercase k's)
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I prefer zangband or TOME myself, but the core gameplay remains.
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What about ANGBAND??? Surely the hours I've poured into that have improved me in some way? Surely???
If you had to read and understand lots of text, it did help you with reading and interpretation. As to the visual, reflexes, etc, I believe playing ball will do the same, with some extra benefits for the rest of the body too. I love games. But I sort of put them aside a bit. I was sad to realize that several of the guys that gather around gaming places do tend to confuse reality and gaming and actually carry the "gaming" attitude into real life, getting into fights rather often.
I'm not so sure ;) (Score:2)
Well, the examples they used do have multiplayer, while Angband doesn't. And they do talk about training your filtering _relevant_ information.
And if it's one thing that my days of counter-strike and other multiplayer FPS-es taught me, the only relevant information, the only thing that another player needs to know on a given map is (A) his mother's weight, (B) her sexual exploits, and (C) his real sexuality. At least that's what everyone was telling me, anyway. I came in expecting stuff like, you know, stra
Department of Redundancy Department (Score:1)
Another mental mechanism is telling me that there is some irrelevant redundancy above.
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Yeah! I just got through playing a violent video game, reading a violent book, being exposed to pornography, viewing violent shows on television, and reading violent comic books, and I instantly became a murderer/rapist because I couldn't differentiate between fiction and reality (which, by the way, is something that all normal people are unable to do)! The video game truly helped me focus on the kill.
Not too surprising... (Score:1)
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Sadly, that test is largely meaningless at this point - too many people have heard of it to be effective.
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OMG! The black team HAX!
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Wow, first time seeing that clip, and I got exactly 15 passes, and noticed the gorilla when she was in the middle of the screen.
It was interesting how I was able to make the people in black simply disappear from view since they weren't relevant to the goal.
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I managed to count 15 - by luck I believe. I also saw the gorilla.
What DID give me problems - occlusion! I couldn't reliably keep track of what the balls were doing because they were obscured far too often.
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So do most Furries.
I don't know if fighter pilots are a good example (Score:2)
The impression that I get after seeing training and hearing stories from vets who used to be in the profession & friends is that its more about planning than quick reaction time. "A reactive pilot dies, a proactive pilot lives." It doesn't matter if you need to turn immediately, your body can't take the G's that the jet exerts if you've already put yourself in that poor of a situation. On a side note, the job takes a serious toll on the body and is certainly not as glamorous as a lot of people make i
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I can home in on things I'm looking for very quickly, but I think my attention to detail suffers as a result of always tackling large volumes of information breadth-first instead of depth-first.
For example if I'm scanning a page of information with a lot of critical information, I skim it and miss what I'm looking for, skim again and miss it again, and it takes awhile before I realize I'm never going to find what I'm looking for this way. Eventually I settle down and read it carefully from the top and find
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Not true. You are ideally suited to managing fast paced processes. You just apparently haven't found the niche that pays off yet. I can do both. Probably not as good as some at either.
I believe at the moment that it is a left vs right brain activity.
It's "Video" Game (Score:1)
And the reality is that vision is the most important perception.
Driving Skills? (Score:2)
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No.
Yes.
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Better drivers? I don't know. However I'd call me a faster reacting driver. Due to FPS games my reaction time decreased significantly over the time.
i'm quite sure (Score:2)
Contradicts what the military says (Score:2)
I was reading an article about a year ago that was comparing soliders from urban areas and rural areas. Video game use is obviously fairly universal among enlistment age males. The hypothesis that was stated was that the soliders who had played video games would be more alert and more effective on patrol. It turned out to be the exact opposite. The kids who played games were more of a liability because their attention was narrowly focused and they would have problems recognizing things that were out of
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Link? I'm skeptical because any gamer that's got tunnel vision and is bad at spotting "out of place" things would be TERRIBLE at almost every FPS.
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Maybe in the old 99 games where maps may as well have been flat colored boxes of various sizes for all they mattered, but with games like Battlefield and especially Bad Company it's getting pretty important to be aware of things.
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Well lets start with landmines, most people would consider one of those pretty important to notice.
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That sounds more like a training failure on the military's part tbh, unless of course hunters are out there looking for a 12 point IED.
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And those 4 brown pixels might be more brown pixels or they might be a sniper 300 meters away. That little blip might just be some bloom or it might have been a tank firing at you from the horizon...
Not necessarily a contradiction (Score:3)
Just because hunting and being outside is more effective at developing military patrol skills than video games are, it doesn't necessarily follow that video games are not effective. They could simply be less effective. Plus, the example quoted in the summary was fighter jet pilots. That sort of task is highly visual in a very different way and I would imagine that at times, modern HUDs resemble video games. Not to mention that, as I have heard, there are several flight simulation games that actually require
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Enhanced visual attention is also useful for your everyday person -- such as anyone who drives a car.
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If you really want to be overall perceptive, you have to work on balancing and interpreting all t
Woah a study that does not bash violent games (Score:1)
the results must be wrong ;)
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Only on my first try.
I need all the enhanced visual attention I can get (Score:1)
FPS game skills in Montreal traffic (Score:1)
America (Score:2)
Film at 11 (Score:2)
So doing $something a lot improves your skill in doing $something_similar?
Whodathunkit!?!?
Peripheral vision, people. (Score:2)
How Call of Duty saved my life. (Score:1)
Great idea with real world application (Score:1)