USA TODAY US Edition

Limiting screen time improves cognition

Study: Kids performed better when they got more sleep and exercise

- Brett Molina

Cutting back on screen time, along with the right amount of sleep and physical activity, is linked to improvemen­ts in cognition among children, a study suggests.

The observatio­nal study analyzed data from a broader study funded by the National Institutes of Health, focusing on 4,500 children ages 8 to 11.

Researcher­s compared time spent on screens, sleeping and engaging in physical activity from that study against the Canadian 24-hour Movement Guidelines, created by the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology to advise how kids should spend their time in a given day.

The study associates kids who met the guidelines – which include nine to 11 hours of sleep, at least one hour of physical activity and less than two hours on screens – with improvemen­ts in cognition.

Researcher­s found even just limiting screen time or getting enough sleep had the strongest links to better cognition.

“Evidence suggests that good sleep and physical activity are associated with improved academic performanc­e, while physical activity is also linked to better reaction time, attention, memory and inhibition,” said Jeremy Walsh, the study’s lead author who works with the CHEO Research Institute in Ottawa, Canada, in a statement.

The study was published last week in the journal The Lancet Child and Adolescent Health.

The study found only 1 in 20 children in the USA met all three guidelines, and nearly 1 in 3 met none of them.

Walsh said that although kids who spent more than two hours in front of screens were linked to poorer cognition, more research is needed to study the impacts of different forms of screen time, such as educationa­l versus entertainm­ent experience­s.

 ?? ELENA FEODRINA/GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Kids who spent less than two hours per day in front of a screen, exercised and got enough sleep showed improvemen­ts in brain function.
ELENA FEODRINA/GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Kids who spent less than two hours per day in front of a screen, exercised and got enough sleep showed improvemen­ts in brain function.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States