The Jewish Chronicle

Computer game ‘stops negativity’

- BY NATHAN JEFFAY

ISRAELI RESEARCHER­S have developed a computer game that gives people the strength to keep negative thoughts in check and stay happy.

Noga Cohen, a research student at the Psychology Department at Ben Gurion University, was determined to find a way to help people stop repeatedly turning over negative or “ruminative” thoughts in their minds.

She decided to develop a computer game that forces players to exercise strict control over what their minds focus on, and then see if they can apply this discipline to unhappy thoughts.

In a joint project with Hebrew University, she found that a half hour “training session” on the game could reduce ruminative thoughts that were triggered by a memory of an unpleasant personal experience. She reached this conclusion by comparing the players of the game with a control group that did not play it.

The tasks in the game were simple: identifyin­g the direction of one arrow from among many, and deciding on the colour of a square.

Dr Cohen’s original research only dealt with the very short-term effects of the game, but she now wants to test the lasting effects of repeated play.

MOST HOLIDAY-MAKERS would be delighted to find themselves transporte­d to the lush island paradise of Grenada in the Caribbean.

Not Edward Gamson and his partner, however, who thought they had booked a flight to Granada in Spain.

The couple first noticed that a mixup had taken place when the in-flight electronic map showed their aircraft heading west out of London.

Instead of a two-hour flight to Spain, the couple found themselves in the air for nine hours, en route to the Caribbean, 4,000 miles from their planned destinatio­n. Mr Gamson, a dentist from the US, blames a British Airways booking agent for the error and is now suing the airline for $34,000 in US courts.

He said: “I made it absolutely clear to the booking agent I wanted to go to Granada in Spain.

“Why on earth would I want to go to Grenada in the Caribbean if I was flying back to America from Lisbon?”

Mr Gamson said that he and his partner had been planning to visit Granada’s 11th-century Alhambra palace.

“I have a lifelong interest in Islamic art. I’m also of Spanish Jewish heritage, so it was something I had always wanted to do to visit Granada and the Alhambra,” he said.

Crew on board the flight reportedly apologised for the mistake but British Airways refused to reimburse the £2,650 they paid for the first class tickets.

British Airways has resisted Mr Gamson’s claim for damages, but an American judge rejected the airline’s attempt to have part of his lawsuit struck out. The claim is now expected to go to a full hearing.

Mr Gamson said: “It’s just so sad. A trip we had been really looking forward to was ruined and BA won’t do the decent thing.”

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 ??  ?? Spot the difference: a Grenada beach and ( right) Alhambra
Spot the difference: a Grenada beach and ( right) Alhambra

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