Taken from this weeks news
I knew that we were becoming more reliant on assistive technology, but this is quite frightening.
Doctors in South Korea are reporting a surge in "digital dementia" among young people who have become so reliant on electronic devices that they can no longer remember everyday details like their phone numbers.
That is now developing into the early onset of digital dementia – a term
coined in South Korea – meaning a deterioration in cognitive abilities that is
more commonly seen in people who have suffered a head injury or psychiatric
illness.
"Over-use of smartphones and game devices hampers the balanced development of
the brain," Byun Gi-won, a doctor at the Balance Brain Centre in Seoul, told the
JoongAng Daily newspaper.
"Heavy users are likely to develop the left side of their brains, leaving the
right side untapped or underdeveloped," he said.
The right side of the brain is linked with concentration and its failure to
develop will affect attention and memory span, which could in as many as 15 per
cent of cases lead to the early onset of dementia.
The situation appears to be worsening, doctors report, with the percentage of
people aged between 10 and 19 who use their smartphones for more than seven
hours every day leaping to 18.4 per cent, an increase of seven per cent from
last year.
More than 67 per cent of South Koreans have a smartphone, the highest in the world, with that figure standing at more than 64 per cent in teenagers, up from 21.4 per cent in 2011, according to the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning.
Dr Manfred Spitzer, a German neuroscientist, published a book titled "Digital Dementia" in 2012 that warned parents and teachers of the dangers of allowing children to spend too much time on a laptop, mobile phone or other electronic devices.
Dr Spitzer warned that the deficits in brain development are irreversible and called for digital media to be banned from German classrooms before children become "addicted."
More than 67 per cent of South Koreans have a smartphone, the highest in the world, with that figure standing at more than 64 per cent in teenagers, up from 21.4 per cent in 2011, according to the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning.
Dr Manfred Spitzer, a German neuroscientist, published a book titled "Digital Dementia" in 2012 that warned parents and teachers of the dangers of allowing children to spend too much time on a laptop, mobile phone or other electronic devices.
Dr Spitzer warned that the deficits in brain development are irreversible and called for digital media to be banned from German classrooms before children become "addicted."
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I always say that we may have this illness, but we are all so different.
This is my own daily problems, but I would gladly share anyone elses, if they send them in,