When Did We Get So Scared of 'Screen Time'?
The myth of brain rot from glowing rectangles

"Too Much Screen Time Damages the Brain," says Psychology Today. "A Dark Consensus About Screens and Kids Begins to Emerge in Silicon Valley," announces The New York Times. "Finally, we're all wising up about the dangers of screen time for kids," adds the Los Angeles Times. Then there's the New York Post, which in 2016 ran a Nicholas Kardaras column headlined "It's 'digital heroin': How screens turn kids into psychotic junkies."
As is often the case, the headlines are overblown. The papers cited in Psychology Today aren't simply about "too much screen time"; they're about people who were dysfunctional enough to be diagnosed with internet addiction. (Not that it's even clear what internet addiction means—researchers haven't come up with a standardized definition of the disorder yet, and not every scientist in the field thinks it's a useful label.) That New York Times article doesn't deal with scientific research at all; it's about employees at Silicon Valley companies who try to limit their kids' exposure to the tools they work on. The Los Angeles Times op-ed spends much more time describing a shift in public opinion than defending it.
And that New York Post column wound up getting debunked in Psychology Today, which sounds a little remorseful about its earlier coverage. "You can find many similar scare headlines and articles elsewhere in the popular media, including even some here at Psychology Today," the outlet explains. Where the Post piece invokes brain imaging studies to declare that "your kid's brain on Minecraft looks like a brain on drugs," the debunker points out the missing context: "The research that Kardaras referred to demonstrates that certain pathways in the forebrain, where dopamine is the neurotransmitter, become active when people are playing video games, and drugs like heroin activate some of these same pathways. What Kardaras' and similar articles leave out, however, is the fact that everything that is pleasurable activates these pathways. These are the brain's pleasure pathways."
There is, in fact, very little good research about screen time's effects on children and teenagers. To the extent that the question is framed that way, there probably won't ever be much good research about it. "Screen time" just isn't a very meaningful category. It's bad enough to jumble all the things you can do on a phone or a tablet or a laptop or a television together. But to jumble the devices themselves together, so that the same concept covers everything from texting to watching the Super Bowl? You might as well be tallying up the time we spend looking at paper.
If you're old enough to have children, you're probably old enough to remember an era when this didn't have to be explained, if only because these activities hadn't all been collapsed into the same omnibus word yet. If your parents thought you tied up the phone line too much, they might limit your phone time. If your parents thought you spent too much time watching television, they might limit your TV time. If your parents thought you played too many video games, they might yell for you to go outside for a while.
No one confused doing too much of one with doing too much of the others. But now they've all been subsumed by a monster called Screens.
For the record: Even if you do combine them like that, the picture isn't very frightening. Two Oxford psychologists, Amy Orben and Andrew Przybylski, recently examined three mammoth sets of data on American and British kids; their conclusions appear in the February issue of Nature Human Behavior. The bad news is they found a negative correlation between using technology and adolescent well-being. The good news is the correlation is tiny. Being bullied has a much stronger negative correlation than using technology. Just wearing glasses has a slightly more negative correlation than using technology. Using technology is, in fact, barely more negative than regularly eating potatoes.
"When viewed in the broader context of the data, it becomes clear that the outsized weight given to digital screen-time in scientific and public discourse might not be merited," Orben and Przybylski conclude. The "evidence simultaneously suggests that the effects of technology might be statistically significant but so minimal that they hold little practical value." When they followed that up with a study in Psychological Science, this one drawing on a different set of data, Orben and Przybylski got similar results.
And of course, correlations don't tell us much about what's actually causing what. One teenager gets depressed from his interactions online; another is already depressed and goes online for comfort. In both cases, "screen time" is correlated with depression, but for one teen the screen is causing the problem and for the other the screen is curing it. Which is more common? A mere correlation won't tell you.
Society is prone to getting nervous about new technologies, and parents in particular can get nervous about pretty much anything, so there's always a market for warnings about the unprecedented threat a technology purportedly poses to your kids. And real risks and drawbacks do exist, so you should of course pay attention to what the people who study tech's effects have to say. In the case of screens, you could go to the American Academy of Pediatrics, whose website has fairly reasonable advice: Pay attention to what your kids are doing online, make sure young children have time for unplugged play, turn off the TV when no one's watching it, and so on. You might not agree with every last word of it, but it has the advantage of focusing on things like what's age-appropriate and how you're interacting with your children, not how many hours a day are spent in front of screens of any sort.
The phrase screen time does slip into the group's advice once, but not in a manner that conflates different activities. Quite the opposite. "Screen time shouldn't always be alone time," the site says. "Co-view, co-play and co-engage with your children when they are using screens—it encourages social interactions, bonding, and learning. Play a video game with your kids. It's a good way to demonstrate good sportsmanship and gaming etiquette. Watch a show with them; you will have the opportunity to introduce and share your own life experiences and perspectives, and guidance."
In other words, it's not just that there are differences between the many activities a kid can do with a screen. There are differences between the ways a kid can do those activities. A girl watching a TV show by herself is not in the same position as a girl watching the same show with a parent. There are times when your kid can get more out of watching a dumb cartoon with you than watching an educational program on her own. Enjoy it with her; talk about it with her; joke around about it with her later. It sure beats using the TV as a babysitter.
Not that you should feel terrible about occasionally using the TV as a babysitter. If you need to be left undisturbed for half an hour to make dinner, an episode of Sofia the First is not going to melt your kid's mind. The important thing isn't the screen; it's the relationship. Be judicious, use common sense, and you should be fine.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
When did we get so scared of screen time? September 9, 1956.
Alternatively, the panic over too much exposure to too much information began October 31, 1517.
Did you look that up online?
I'm still reeling from the news that too much fruit juice will lead to my early death, so I don't have time to worry about excess screen time.
Things that too much of will destroy today's youth. In rough chronological order;
radio
comic books
jazz
rock and roll
TV
rock and roll
drugs
sex
rock and roll
video games
sex
rock and roll
computers
rap
rock and roll
politics
cell phones (talking)
drugs
rock and roll
cell phones (social media)
politics
rock and roll
You need a visual from Tipper Gore.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNT4DikDdQw
Thanks, that reminds me, I forgot a couple:
Google
Facebook
youtube
twitter
Good choices. All the best!
Facebook Refuses To Delete Fake Nancy Pelosi Video That Makes Her Seem Drunk!!!
https://www.yahoo.com/huffpost/facebook-nancy-pelosi-video-fake-news-201042446.html
oh yea.
Man lights cigarette on Spirit Airlines flight in startling viral footage!!!
https://news.yahoo.com/man-lights-cigarette-spirit-airlines-161505578.html;_ylt=AwrE1932VOlcs14ALEFXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTByMjB0aG5zBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDBHNlYwNzYw--
go back a little further and you'll find moral panics over bicycles and... kids playing chess. Also board games.
There's trouble right here in River City!
Chess is Muslim after all.
You forgot D&D and Socialism.
You forgot loosy correlated statistics and p statistic hunting. They will kill us all.
I need my screens to tell me all of the things I need to be deathly afraid of
"...If you need to be left undisturbed for half an hour to make dinner, an episode of Sofia the First is not going to melt your kid's mind..."
But what happens if TRUMP shows up?!
Oh, his mind is already melted, your kid can't do any more damage.
And kids need to learn about comedy relief anyway...
Gol darn it, these youngsters ought to be playing Parcheesi, like I did when I was a tad!
Hey, Buttinskies! Ya wanna control what a bunch of kids do with their time? Have a bunch of kids!
When I was a kid we played with sharp metal lawn darts, bows and arrows, firecrackers, and guns. It was a miracle we all survived intact.
And rode bicycles without helmets - and spent hours a day outside without adult supervision. We even played softball on any handy vacant lot with no coaches or umpire!
"You might as well be tallying up the time we spend looking at paper."
There's a very big difference between looking at paper and looking at a screen. The screen is typically filled with links and content vying for attention. Paper isn't. As I understand the research, screens enhance our ability to multitask. Paper is ideal for honing sustained, concentrated attention.
Not confetti mr smart guy.
Uh, have you seen a newspaper or magazine?
Have you seen a book? Read one?
Concerns over screen time are nothing new. When I was growing up, my mom limited us kids to 1 hour of TV time per week. Kids were supposed to play outside, or at least with toys that developed motor skills. There was something very wrong with parents who would let their kids watch TV for several hours a day.
Certain educational programs were exempt from that one hour restriction, so we got to watch National Geographic specials whenever they were on. But this was in the era when TV only had three channels, so you couldn't exactly flip to NatGeo whenever you wanted it.
"There was something very wrong with parents who would let their kids watch TV for several hours a day."
This goes double if those parents lived in the vicinity of the Canadian border where the nation's lax free-speech regulations allowed profanity, nudity and adult situations to be aired on the socialist CBC network.
dang, I missed that when I was a kid.
I have to say I do find it pretty lame and annoying when kids are always on their tablet or game or whatever. But they aren't my kids, so it's not really my business.
I think it is really important for kids to have lots of unstructured play. And computers and other tech toys can be good for that. But they can be pretty bad too.
I'm probably like most people (who had reasonably happy childhoods) and think the way I grew up is the right way.
Screen Time.
Something else for the busybodies and the government to protect us from.
Regulation is Salvation!
Not that it's even clear what internet addiction means
Posting hundreds of nearly identical comments a day for 15 years in your favorite political chat room might offer a clue to the definition.
Screen time is good for your brain -- you can learn a lot, and communicate with family and friends. Not so good for your body -- get outside and play or exercise occasionally.
I have a feeling, if it were studied, that kids on computers make more peaceful contacts with people from other countries than the U.S. State Department does. That ought to count for something.
What Kardaras' and similar articles leave out, however, is the fact that everything that is pleasurable activates these pathways. These are the brain's pleasure pathways.
"Well, then, if it makes you feel good, it must be regulated. We'll get around to all those other pleasurable activities later."
It's 'digital heroin': How screens turn kids into psychotic junkies.
The first "violent" first-person video game was Doom, which launched in 1993. Isn't it interesting that the U.S. violent crime rate peaked that year, and has been dropping ever since? Makes it kind of hard to argue that those games, which went from zero to zillions of players, caused any sort of psychotic mass problems.
Freedom is slavery
Before computers, my wife spent all her free time reading books. Now she spends her free time reading books on her Kindle and I get to watch whatever I want on TV.
The main problem with hours and hours of screen time is that it leaves few waking hours for things kids are required to do like homework and things adults would like them to do like chores. It can also make your kid fat and unhealthy if it replaces most physical activity. Early onset type II diabetes and all that.