November, 2007 in Mind & Brain | 0 comments | Post a comment

Shoot First, Ace Geometry Later

Video gaming may eliminate the gender gap in spatial skills

By Siri Carpenter

 
Email this Article Print this Article    Text Size GraphicDecrease fontEnlarge font  
Share
Reddit  Review it on NewsTrust   
Fark 
 

Playing an action-packed video game nearly wipes out sex differences in a basic spatial thinking task, research reveals. In a study of college students, men were better than women at rapidly switching their attention among stimuli displayed on a computer screen, a common test of spatial ability. But after both sexes played the role of a World War II soldier in a video game for 10 hours over several weeks, women caught up to men on the spatial-attention task, as well as on an object-rotation test of more advanced spatial ability. Women’s gains persisted when the volunteers were retested an average of five months later.

The study’s lead author, University of Toronto psychologist Ian Spence, speculates that the video game practice may have caused “massive overexercising” of the brain’s attentional system or even switched on previously inactive genes that underlie spatial cognition. Either way, he says, the results hold tantalizing potential for designing action-intensive video games that appeal to girls and women, perhaps eventually boosting women’s participation in fields such as mathematics and engineering, which demand good spatial ability.

Graphic - Get the Rest of the Article


Discuss


Click here to submit your comment.

VIEW:

loading comments...
The following is a direct response to this comment.
{BODY}

 
2,573 characters remaining
 
  Email me when someone responds to this discussion.


© 1996-2008 Scientific American Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
ADVERTISEMENT


You are viewing a mobilized version of this site...
View original page here

Mobilized by Mowser Mowser