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    Enhanced disengagement of auditory attention and phonological skills in action video gamers

    Autor: 
    Mancarella, M.
    ;
    Antzaka, A.
    ;
    Bertoni, S.
    ;
    Facoetti, A.
    ;
    Lallier, M.
    Fecha: 
    2022
    Palabra clave: 
    experience-based neuroplasticity; spatial attention; fronto-parietal attention networks; stimulus-driven auditory attention; phonological working memory; JCR; Scopus
    Revista / editorial: 
    Computers in Human Behavior
    Citación: 
    Mancarella, M., Antzaka, A., Bertoni, S., Facoetti, A., & Lallier, M. (2022). Enhanced disengagement of auditory attention and phonological skills in action video gamers. Computers in Human Behavior, 135, 107344.
    Tipo de Ítem: 
    Articulo Revista Indexada
    URI: 
    https://reunir.unir.net/handle/123456789/14193
    DOI: 
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2022.107344
    Open Access
    Resumen:
    Video games play a major role in the everyday life of children, teenagers, and adults. Several studies show that action video games (AVGs) improve visual attentional efficiency. AVGs also appear to improve reading speed and phonological skills in children with developmental dyslexia. These results have been linked to the intrinsic characteristics of AVGs, in which fast disengagement of multisensory attention allows for efficient extraction of relevant dynamic information, a skill that is crucially also involved in phonological and reading skills. We tested the hypothesis that AVG players demonstrate faster auditory attention disengagement in an auditory spatial cuing task, as well as better phonological and reading performance than non-players. We found that AVG players were faster in spatial localization of auditory targets and showed enhanced attentional disengagement as indexed by a smaller cuing effect. AVG players also showed better phonological decoding and working memory skills. Moreover, the beneficial effects of AVGs, as measured by faster attentional disengagement, were linked to better phonological and reading skills in adult AVG players. We suggest that a more efficient attentional disengagement - controlled by the posterior parietal cortex - induces enhanced multisensory processing in AVG players.
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