Houston Chronicle Sunday

Are video games really bad for your kids?

Study gathers data on activities’ effect on children’s brains

- By Meredith Cohn

BALTIMORE — Parents wondering how video games, athletic pursuits or sleeping habits may affect their kids’ brains may get some answers thanks to a massive effort underway at 21 institutio­ns across the country.

Researcher­s are recruiting 11,500 kids aged 9 or 10 to participat­e in the largest study of its kind on the affects — good and bad — of myriad activities on adolescent brain developmen­t. They plan to create a giant new database available to researcher­s everywhere that could inform everything from public policy to education to parenting.

“This will answer so many questions about brain developmen­t,” said Dr. Linda Chang, a neurologis­t and co-lead investigat­or heading a team of more than a dozen people at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, which is among the participat­ing institutio­ns and plans to recruit close to 600 kids. “We’ll see, for example, if children who sleep less than six hours a night have their memories affected or if those who do drugs have trouble paying attention in school.”

Some of the questions have been asked before, and this database can be used not only to confirm or refute previous findings but to drill down on difference­s among urban and suburban children or those of different ethnicitie­s, genders or income levels, Chang said. That could lead to changes in public health policy or methods of educating students with different background­s, for example.

The children will answer questions, provide saliva samples to measure hormone levels and submit for MRI scanning of their brains over the next decade. The data will be available to any scientist around the globe who wants to use it.

$300 million effort

Chang, a professor in the department of diagnostic radiology and nuclear medicine as well as the department of neurology, has some questions of her own. She has studied the affect of drugs used by pregnant women on their children and plans to use the database to reaffirm her findings and go a bit further. The children in this study will be 19 or 20 when the data collection stops.

Known as the ABCD Study for Adolescent Brain Cognitive Developmen­t, the $300 million effort is funded by several federal agencies within the National Institutes of Health, as well as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Justice, with support from the institutio­ns where children are being recruited. Maryland will use its own MRI machine and provide the staff, including Chang, investigat­ors administer­ing the questionna­ire, health staff and data experts to harness the informatio­n.

Christine C. Cloak, the study’s site coordinato­r, has been recruiting students through schools in Baltimore and surroundin­g counties, mainly by passing out flyers. She said going through schools ensures a broad spectrum of children participat­e. There are a few restrictio­ns, such as certain brain conditions or braces that are metal and can’t be put in an MRI machine, which relies on magnets.

Recruitmen­t began in 2016 and enrollment ends at year’s end.

‘Going to find out’

Lisa Tanner saw a flyer sent home from school about the ABCD Study. She said she was excited about the possibilit­ies for science.

“You read about this study or that study and wonder where it is happening and who are these real people,” said Tanner, who signed up her 9-year-old son Alex and 10-year-old daughter Rachel.

In her first trip to Maryland, Tanner thought her answers would be the same for both children — parents and kids both answer the hundreds of questions on the questionna­ire. Both kids said they are big readers. But Rachel loves art and writing, too. Alex is into karate, Ninja Warrior and make-believe adventures, meaning they spend more time on different activities than their mother previously thought.

Chang said they will see how reading, screen time, sports, drugs, coffee and any number of other things will influence their developmen­t.

“Does playing a musical instrument have a positive effect?” Chang said. “What about a lack of sleep? We’re going to find out.”

The children and parents will not be asked to change any behavior, just to report their actions (to ensure truthfulne­ss, children won’t have to tell their parents about their activities such as drug use or sexual encounters.)

Chang said the idea behind starting with 9- and 10-year-olds is to get them before they launch too heavily into drug experiment­ation or other more grown-up changes. The children get a psychologi­cal screening, and she said the families of those who expressed depressive thoughts were referred for services. Imaging staff identified brain tumors on the MRIs of two other children, and they were sent for follow-up care.

But mostly, the questions and brain images are recorded and loaded into the NIH-minded database and updated annually. Researcher­s will call the families every six months to keep in contact and make sure they remain willing to participat­e.

About 7,500 kids have been enrolled nationally so far, and NIH released the first data in mid-February on about 4,500 of them. The 30 terabytes of data is about three times the size of the Library of Congress’ collection, according to the NIH.

 ?? Michael Cummo / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Kids take turns playing retro video games at a library in Stamford, Conn. Researcher­s are recruiting 11,500 kids to study the effects of activities like video games on adolescent brains.
Michael Cummo / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Kids take turns playing retro video games at a library in Stamford, Conn. Researcher­s are recruiting 11,500 kids to study the effects of activities like video games on adolescent brains.

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