Saturday, April 25, 2015

Smartphones making children borderline autistic, warns expert...

Children struggle to read emotions and are less empathetic than a generation ago because they spend too much time using tablets and smartphones, a leading psychiatrist has warned.

Iain McGilchrist said children as young as five were less able to read facial expressions because of too much interaction with technology.

He added that he had evidence that more pupils were displaying borderline "autistic" behaviour. Dr McGilchrist, a former Oxford literary scholar who retrained in medicine, said he had heard of increasing numbers of teachers who had to explain to their pupils how to make sense of human faces.

However, experts have said children’s lack of ability to read emotions may be down to cultural or language barriers and not just technology.

Mr McGilchrist said he’d heard from teachers who said they now have to explain to their pupils how to make sense of the human face more than a few years ago.

 Mr McGilchrist said he has been contacted by teachers of five to seven year olds who have estimated that roughly a third of their pupils find it difficult to keep attention, read faces and show empathy. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Japanese university tells students: 'Give up smartphones or quit'
  2. People not talking to each other because of smartphones...
  3. My students don't know how to have a conversation...
  4. Are our children the next generation of zombies?
  5. 10 reasons why you shouldn't let your child play with smartphone or iPad...

No comments:

Post a Comment