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 Hyeok; Park, Hyun-Jung; Yeo, Sang-Hoon; Kim, 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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