Researchers
are seriously investigating what exactly gaming can do for you. Scientists,
therapists, and sociologists alike discover that gaming can change you for the
better.
6. Games are excellent for socializing.
3. Games can also help you stay fit.
Millions
of gamers punch their thumbs on their gamepads everyday. With 1.6 gamers to
every US household, the case for video games deserves some serious
consideration apparently.
I’m not
the most avid of all the gaming enthusiasts; here's my Top 10 Reasons Why You
Should Play Video Games, anyway.
10. Games can be therapeutic.
It has
been found out that virtual reality helped treat the pain of a severely burned
marine. In the game SnowWorld, doctors put him in a 3D snowball fight while
surgeons operated on his burns. With the game, he thought about the pain less
than 25% of the time.
The
game “Chaz Fortune” simulates a bar with casino games to help gambling addicts
resist their temptations and quit their vice.
Games
are now seriously integrated into the treatment of mental and physical health,
early development, and rehabilitation.
9. Games help conquer fears and obsessions.
SpiderWorld
lets people with arachnophobia face a tiny spider at their own pace. Dirty
Bathroom takes people with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) through messier
and messier bathrooms, helping them overcome their anxiety.
According
todid-you-kno.tumblr.com, playing Tetris after a traumatic event reduces the
occurrence of negative flashbacks.
8. Games strengthen marriage.
According
to a US study, 76% of married couples said playing MMORPGs like World of
Warcraft together had a positive effect on their marriage.
7. Games are used for real-life “environment
simulation”.
The
Military use games to train soldiers for a simulation of a “military
environment”. These war games include the Tom Clancy series, Call of Duty,
Brothers at War, America's Army, Battlefield, and others. Virtual simulators
from games are used by pilots use for training.
The
U.S. Army has deployed machines such as the PackBot and UAV vehicles, which
make use of a game-style hand controller to make it more familiar for young
people [4].
More
than 100 Fortune 500 companies, like IBM, Cisco, and Cold Stone Creamery, use
some form of gaming for training purposes.
6. Games are excellent for socializing.
Sixty-five
(65%) of gamers play with their friends.
Two out
of five US and UK Internet users play social games for more than 15 minutes a
week. On Facebook, 40% of users' activity is spent on social games like Words
with Friends, FarmVille, and others.
Online
gamers like World of Warcraft (WoW) and Runescape are brimming with people and
adventures. WoW alone has a whopping 12 million members - about the same as the
megacity Tokyo's population!
I have
a friend who has fetched a foreign friend he met in an MMORPG from the airport
and drove him around the city.
5. Games for science’s sake.
In
Eterna and Foldit games, players solve biochemical puzzles, helping scientists
better understand genetics.
Educational
games contribute to major research efforts: In Galaxy Zoo, people classify
objects seen by the Hubble telescope. 50 million real galaxies and celestial
bodies were classified in the game's first year.
4. Games are brain workouts.
Games improve
creativity and imagination. Students are found to be "learning by
doing" while playing video games while fostering creative thinking [3].
According
to research discussed at the 2008 Convention of the American Psychological
Association (CAPA), certain types of video games can improve the gamers'
dexterity as well as their ability to problem-solve. A study of 33 laparoscopic
surgeons found that those who played video games were 27% faster at advanced
surgical procedures and made 37% fewer errors compared to those who did not
play video games [5].
3. Games can also help you stay fit.
Physical
and aerobic workouts in games like Wii Fit and Kinect Fitness can boost stamina
and heart rate levels. Researchers also use games to monitor the health of
senior citizens. Their efforts can predict an illness or even a patient's risk
of falling.
2. Games improve hand-eye coordination.
According
to the 2008 CAPA in their study of 303 laparoscopic surgeons (82%men and 18% women),
showed that surgeons who played video games requiring spatial skills and hand
dexterity and then performed a drill testing these skills were significantly
faster at their first attempt and across all 10 trials than the surgeons who
did not play the video games first.[5]
It has
been shown that action video game players have better hand-eye coordination and
visuo-motor skills, such as their resistance to distraction, their sensitivity
to information in the peripheral vision and their ability to count briefly
presented objects, than nonplayers.[1]
Action
games also help sharpen vision and help cure ambiyopia (commonly called as
"lazy eye"). In one hour, some games can do what an eye patch does in
400 hours.
1. Games improve problem-solving and analytical
skills.
Games
improve quick decision making even with multiple things at once. Reflexes are
shown to have been improved in gamers. Gamers develop the capacity to solve
several problems in different situations, too.
According
to researchers Shawn Green and Daphne Bavelier of the University of Rochester,
video games are based upon the player navigating (and eventually mastering) a
highly complex system with many variables. This requires a strong analytical
ability, as well as flexibility and adaptability.
He
argues that the process of learning the boundaries, goals, and controls of a
given game is often a highly demanding one that calls on many different areas
of cognitive function. Most games require a great deal of patience and focus
from the player, and, contrary to the popular perception that games provide
instant gratification, games actually delay gratification far longer than other
forms of entertainment such as film or even many books.[2]
Researches
suggest that video games increase players' attention capacities, too.
Early
literacy is also improved by games for 4 and 5 year olds, especially letter
recognition and story comprehension.
Non-English
native speakers who play games are also shown to have improved capabilities in
oral and written English compared to those who don’t.
People
that play video games make decisions 25% faster.
To sum
it up, games can indeed have positive effects. But that doesn’t mean that it
has no bad effects, either. As with anything, moderation is the key.
Experts
suggest playing for less than 21 hours a week. Past 21 hours, benefits for
gaming decrease and the effects turn harmful. Some games are marred with
extreme violence and other bad things not recommended for children of young
age. Discernment and choosing the right game is very important.
Anyhow,
I was stacking pallets with odd-sized boxes earlier. I did it with ease, thanks Tetris.
References:
[1]
Green, C. Shawn; Bavelier, Daphne (2003). "Action video game modifies
visual selective attention". Nature 423 (6939): 534–537.
[2]
Daphne Bavelier et al. (2003). "Action video game modifies visual
selective attention" (PDF). Nature/University of Rochester. Archived from
the original on March 29, 2006. Retrieved April 29, 2006.
[3]
Glazer, S. (2006). "Video games". CQ Researcher 16: 960–937.
cqresrre2006111000.
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