The Daily Telegraph

Too much time spent on touchscree­ns ‘could harm infant brain developmen­t’

- By Laura Donnelly HEALTH EDITOR

BABIES’ sleep and subsequent brain developmen­t may be being harmed by the use of iPads and other touchscree­n devices, research suggests.

The British study found that every hour infants spent on such devices was linked to 16 minutes less sleep per day.

The research, on more than 700 families, is the first to look at the link between touchscree­ns and sleep in babies and toddlers.

It found that some toddlers aged 12 to 18 months were spending as much as five hours a day on touchscree­n devices. Even babies less than a year old were found to be spending as much as two and a half hours on such gadgets.

Average screen time was far lower, at less than nine minutes, for babies aged six to 11 months, rising to 44 minutes for those between 26 and 36 months.

Researcher­s at Birkbeck, University of London and King’s College London questioned 715 parents about their child’s daily touchscree­n use and sleep patterns. They found that babies and toddlers who spent more time using a touchscree­n slept less at night and, despite sleeping more during the day, slept for less time overall.

Sleep is important for the developmen­t of the brain, especially during the first few years of life, when “neural plasticity” is at its greatest.

The study could not prove a causal link between use of the devices and shortened sleep, as it relied on parents’ records. But researcher­s said there were four potential mechanisms which could be taking effect.

These include the impact of blue light, which can affect the body clock, and the stimulatio­n caused by the content of the games or programmes. Infants and toddlers might also be spending less time sleeping because they were staying up later on devices. Lastly, children who particular­ly sought out longer time on such gadgets might be more likely to suffer from other conditions such as hyperactiv­ity.

Previous research by the same team has found that babies and toddlers who used iPads had superior motor skills to those who did not.

Dr Tim Smith, from Birkbeck, said: “There is so much cognitive developmen­t going on at that stage that it’s possible any influence would have an amplifying effect.”

The team is planning new studies to try to establish whether there is a causal relationsh­ip between use of touchscree­n devices and sleep.

Dr Smith said it was difficult to give clear advice to parents because the science was so immature.

But he said it was sensible to allow almost no screen use for those below the age of 18 months, apart from “video chat” such as Skype.

Other scientists said findings should be interprete­d with “extreme caution”. Dr Andrew Przybylski, experiment­al psychologi­st and research fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, said the fact parents were told in advance about the purpose of the research could have skewed the results.

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