A Multimodal Analysis Combining Behavioral Experiments and Survey-Based Methods to Assess the Cognitive Effect of Video Game Playing: Good or Evil?

Authors
Jeong, Ji HyeokPark, Hyun-JungYeo, Sang-HoonKim, Hyungmin
Issue Date
2020-06
Publisher
MDPI
Citation
SENSORS, v.20, no.11
Abstract
This study aims to bridge the gap between the discrepant views of existing studies in different modalities on the cognitive effect of video game play. To this end, we conducted a set of tests with different modalities within each participant: (1) Self-Reports Analyses (SRA) consisting of five popular self-report surveys, and (2) a standard Behavioral Experiment (BE) using pro- and antisaccade paradigms, and analyzed how their results vary between Video Game Player (VGP) and Non-Video Game Player (NVGP) participant groups. Our result showed that (1) VGP scored significantly lower in Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS) than NVGP (p = 0.023), and (2) VGP showed significantly higher antisaccade error rate than NVGP (p = 0.005), suggesting that results of both SRA and BE support the existing view that video game play has a maleficent impact on the cognition by increasing impulsivity. However, the following correlation analysis on the results across individual participants found no significant correlation between SRA and BE, indicating a complex nature of the cognitive effect of video game play.
Keywords
INTERNET GAMING DISORDER; INHIBITORY CONTROL; COMPUTER GAME; FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY; RESPONSE-INHIBITION; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; RISK-FACTORS; ATTENTION; ADDICTION; PLAYERS; INTERNET GAMING DISORDER; INHIBITORY CONTROL; COMPUTER GAME; FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY; RESPONSE-INHIBITION; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; RISK-FACTORS; ATTENTION; ADDICTION; PLAYERS; internet gaming disorder; video game addiction; impulsivity; response inhibition; prosaccade; antisaccade
ISSN
1424-8220
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/118575
DOI
10.3390/s20113219
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2020
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