过度使用互联网会破坏青少年大脑的关键部分
Excessive Internet Use Disrupts Key Parts Of The Teenage Brain

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/excessive-internet-use-disrupts-key-parts-teenage-brain

文章讨论了过度使用屏幕对青少年大脑和行为的影响。 调查显示,青少年在社交媒体平台上花费了大量时间——平均每天 4.8 小时——其中女孩花费的时间稍长。 这种过度使用已被认为是父母关注的一个问题,因此呼吁尽早进行有关不健康屏幕使用风险的教育。 研究表明,长时间看屏幕会对青少年大脑功能产生多种不利影响。 对 12 项研究的回顾表明,大脑不同部位的活动水平发生了变化,影响了行为、智力、身体协调性和心理健康发展。 此外,一项涉及 169 名六年级和七年级学生的研究发现,经常查看社交媒体的人对同伴反馈表现出高度敏感,对先前奖励性刺激的反应减弱,并且难以控制冲动或习惯。 这些变化表明过度使用社交媒体与成瘾行为之间存在相关性。 网络成瘾的症状与其他成瘾症状类似。 这些迹象包括过度关注屏幕使用、停止使用后出现戒断症状、对其他活动缺乏兴趣,以及将屏幕使用置于工作、学校或人际关系等责任之上。 有效的治疗包括家庭治疗、鼓励替代活动和认知行为治疗(CBT)。 CBT 旨在解决与屏幕使用相关的思维扭曲,而家庭治疗则侧重于加强家庭纽带和解决具体问题。 一些极端情况需要“数字排毒”,即逐渐恢复有限的屏幕暴露,从而实现更健康的替代品并最终重新融入技术使用。 为了防止过度使用屏幕及其产生的负面影响,家长应了解过多屏幕时间造成的危害,并制定培养健康屏幕习惯的策略。 与孩子共度美好时光、户外探索、情感、社交和毅力辅导,以及限制屏幕可访问性,都有助于培养孩子的适应能力,并减少出现消极、适应不良行为的可能性。 早期识别和干预可以最大限度地减少过度使用屏幕对青少年大脑造成的长期伤害,并确保他们在生活中以更加平衡的方式对待技术。

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原文

Authored by George Citroner via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The internet drives news cycles and touches practically every aspect of our lives—from communicating with friends and family to finding a job. The current crop of teens is unique from any previous generation in that they are immersed in a virtual world that can present very differently from reality. Many teens have become addicted to it.

A 2023 Statista survey found that U.S. teenagers spent an average of 4.8 hours on social media platforms every day, with girls spending an average of 5.3 hours compared to 4.4 hours for boys.

“Being as excessive and addictive screen use is routinely listed as one of parents’ biggest concerns for children, I think it’s overdue that we start educating children as early as possible about the dangers of unhealthy and mindless screen use,” Anthony Anzalone, a clinical psychologist at Stony Brook Medicine, told The Epoch Times.

(Paula Daniëlse/Getty Images)

Teen Brain Development Affected

Scientists have begun investigating the consequences of living one’s life online, and what they’ve discovered is discouraging.

A systematic review from the University College London, published in June in PLOS Mental Health, looked at 12 studies involving 237 youths aged 10 to 19 who had a formal diagnosis of internet addiction between 2013 and 2023. All the studies were conducted in Asian countries.

Researchers defined internet addiction as an inability to resist the urge to use the internet, which negatively affects mental well-being, as well as aspects of social, educational, and work life.

All studies reviewed used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine how areas of the brain interact with each other (functional connectivity) in participants living with internet addiction while at rest and while completing a task. The effects were seen throughout multiple regions of the adolescent brain.

The studies showed a mixture of increased and decreased activity in parts of the brain that are activated during rest, along with an overall decrease in functional connectivity in parts of the brain used in active thinking.

The findings indicate these changes lead to addictive behaviors and tendencies in adolescents and behavioral changes associated with intellectual ability, physical coordination, and mental health and development.

Functional Changes in the Brain

Another study, published in 2023 in JAMA Pediatrics, investigated a group of 169 sixth- and seventh-grade students from a middle school in rural North Carolina. Researchers split the students into smaller groups according to how often they reported checking their Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat feeds.

The habitual user group members checked their feeds 15 or more times daily, moderate users between one and 14 times, and nonhabitual users less than once daily.

The children received three brain scans at roughly one-year intervals while they played a computer game that offered rewards and punishment in the form of smiling or scowling faces.

While playing the game, frequent checkers demonstrated changes in brain regions linked to reward processing, which typically responds to experiences like winning money or risk-taking. They also had difficulty controlling impulsive or habitual behaviors.

The findings indicate that teens who grow up checking social media more often become hypersensitive to feedback from other kids. They also experience fewer or less intense positive feelings from previously rewarding stimuli, which could drive them to pursue more potent feelings through increased reward-seeking behavior.

However, the effects of habitual checking may depend on the individual, according to the authors.

In some children, checking could become “compulsive and problematic” while others engage in “an adaptive behavior that allows them to better navigate their increasingly digital environment,” the authors suggested.

Signs of Disruption

Anzalone said that much like with other addictions, people addicted to the internet tend to exhibit a pattern of behaviors that impede daily functioning, such as excessive preoccupation with screen use and withdrawal symptoms when screen use is not possible.

Other notable features of internet addiction include the following:

  • Inability to reduce time spent online
  • Lack of interest in other activities
  • Continued screen use despite real-world problems
  • Use of gaming to remove negative moods
  • Jeopardizing jobs, school, or relationships due to screen use

Treatment

According to Anzalone, treating teen internet addiction requires strong family involvement.

He pointed out that most of the evidence regarding the treatment of internet addiction revolves around a combination of family therapy “to help promote effective communication and collaboration between caregivers and children,” promoting other activities to replace “hazardous media use,” and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to address distortions that patients may have about themselves or their screen usage.

CBT is based on the idea that how people think about situations can affect their feelings and behaviors. Family therapy is a type of talk therapy focused on improving relationships between family members, which can help treat specific mental health or behavioral issues.

A systematic review and meta-analysis of 57 randomized controlled trials found that CBT, in combination with other treatments, was among the therapies that ranked best to treat internet addiction effectively.

“In many cases, the internet addiction is the symptom and not the cause of the problem, so it’s essential that we address any underlying mental health conditions that may be exacerbating the issues, such as depression, anxiety, or ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder),” Anzalone added.

However, he emphasized that in severe cases, a “digital detox” may be needed. In this detox, exposure to nonessential screen use is gradually reduced, and mindful habits and better-quality activities replace constant digital stimulation. Only after this detox can children be safely reintroduced to technology.

Prevention

Anzalone suggested that parents be educated about how harmful excessive screen use is for children and provided with tools to help them raise children with healthy screen habits, the most important of which is parental support and interaction.

“For young children, nothing will ever replace the quality time a caregiver spends with their child,” he said.

He added that the more parents help their children explore their environment, encourage play outside, and provide children with emotional, social, and persistence coaching to help them better connect with the world and build resiliency to handle life’s stressors, “the less we will see them engage in various negative and maladaptive behaviors.”

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