Clipped from: Video gamers: Size of brain structures predicts success |
Video Gamers: Size of Brain Structures Predicts Success
ScienceDaily (Jan. 21, 2010) — Researchers can predict your performance on a video game simply by measuring the volume of specific structures in your brain, a multi-institutional team reports this week.
The new study, in the journal Cerebral Cortex, found that nearly a quarter of the variability in achievement seen among men and women trained on a new video game could be predicted by measuring the volume of three structures in their brains.The study adds to the evidence that specific parts of the striatum, a collection of distinctive tissues tucked deep inside the cerebral cortex, profoundly influence a person's ability to refine his or her motor skills, learn new procedures, develop useful strategies and adapt to a quickly changing environment.
Clipped from: Striatal Volume Predicts Level of Video Game Skill Acquisition -- Erickson et al., 10.1093/cercor/bhp293 -- Cerebral Cortex |
Cerebral Cortex Advance Access published online on January 20, 2010
Cerebral Cortex, doi:10.1093/cercor/bhp293
Striatal Volume Predicts Level of Video Game Skill Acquisition
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Figure 1. Regions studied. Display in 3D and 2D images for the segmentations used to identify the nucleus accumbens (orange), putamen (red), caudate nucleus (blue), and hippocampus (green).
Clipped from: Video gamers: Size of brain structures predicts succes |
Kramer, Graybiel, Erickson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Art Kramer (left) at Illinois, Ann Graybiel of MIT, and Kirk Erickson of the University of Pittsburgh found that the volume of specific brain structures could predict how well a person would perform on a video game. The study was conducted at the University of Illinois.
They used high-resolution Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) to analyze the size of these brain regions in 39 healthy adults (aged 18-28; 10 of them male) who had spent less than three hours a week playing video games in the previous two years. The volume of each brain structure was compared to that of the brain as a whole.
Participants were then trained on one of two versions of Space Fortress, a video game developed at the University of Illinois that requires players to try to destroy a fortress without losing their own ship to one of several potential hazards.
Clipped from: Space Fortress :: CogWorks Laboratories :: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute / RPI |
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Space Fortress is an action video game that requires constant shifts of attention, memory retrievals, visual tracking, fine motor control, and dynamic decision making. We are creating a hybrid cognitive model to play the game, part of a larger effort in studying skill transfer.
Sources:
- Video gamers: Size of brain structures predicts success
- Striatal Volume Predicts Level of Video Game Skill Acquisition -- Erickson et al., 10.1093/cercor/bhp293 -- Cerebral Cortex
- Video gamers: Size of brain structures predicts success
- Space Fortress :: CogWorks Laboratories :: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute / RPI
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- University of Pittsburgh: News From Pitt
- Video gamers: Size of brain structures predicts success
- BBC News - Video game success may be in the mind, study finds
- Are Big Brains Predictors of Success?
- Big brains for video games - Cosmic Log - msnbc.com
- Want to be a better gamer? Size matters | Health Tech - CNET News
- Skilled video gamers have bigger brain structures, more success, study says | The Toybox | ZDNet.com
- Brain Scans Reveal Video Gamers' Secrets - BusinessWeek
- Study shows that better gamers have bigger brains, are better learners too -- Engadget