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Media multitasking in adolescence
by
Finn, Amy S.
, Cain, Matthew S.
, Leonard, Julia A.
, Gabrieli, John D. E.
in
Academic achievement
/ Achievement
/ Adolescent
/ Adolescent Behavior - physiology
/ Adolescent Development - physiology
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Child
/ Child development
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive Psychology
/ Communications Media
/ Executive Function - physiology
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Impulsivity
/ Individuality
/ Male
/ Memory
/ Memory, Short-Term - physiology
/ Motor ability
/ Multitasking
/ Personality
/ Psychology
/ Reading
/ Reading comprehension
/ Teenagers
/ Theoretical Review
2016
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Media multitasking in adolescence
by
Finn, Amy S.
, Cain, Matthew S.
, Leonard, Julia A.
, Gabrieli, John D. E.
in
Academic achievement
/ Achievement
/ Adolescent
/ Adolescent Behavior - physiology
/ Adolescent Development - physiology
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Child
/ Child development
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive Psychology
/ Communications Media
/ Executive Function - physiology
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Impulsivity
/ Individuality
/ Male
/ Memory
/ Memory, Short-Term - physiology
/ Motor ability
/ Multitasking
/ Personality
/ Psychology
/ Reading
/ Reading comprehension
/ Teenagers
/ Theoretical Review
2016
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Media multitasking in adolescence
by
Finn, Amy S.
, Cain, Matthew S.
, Leonard, Julia A.
, Gabrieli, John D. E.
in
Academic achievement
/ Achievement
/ Adolescent
/ Adolescent Behavior - physiology
/ Adolescent Development - physiology
/ Behavioral Science and Psychology
/ Child
/ Child development
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive Psychology
/ Communications Media
/ Executive Function - physiology
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Impulsivity
/ Individuality
/ Male
/ Memory
/ Memory, Short-Term - physiology
/ Motor ability
/ Multitasking
/ Personality
/ Psychology
/ Reading
/ Reading comprehension
/ Teenagers
/ Theoretical Review
2016
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Journal Article
Media multitasking in adolescence
2016
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Overview
Media use has been on the rise in adolescents overall, and in particular, the amount of media multitasking—multiple media consumed simultaneously, such as having a text message conversation while watching TV—has been increasing. In adults, heavy media multitasking has been linked with poorer performance on a number of laboratory measures of cognition, but no relationship has yet been established between media-multitasking behavior and real-world outcomes. Examining individual differences across a group of adolescents, we found that more frequent media multitasking in daily life was associated with poorer performance on statewide standardized achievement tests of math and English in the classroom, poorer performance on behavioral measures of executive function (working memory capacity) in the laboratory, and traits of greater impulsivity and lesser growth mindset. Greater media multitasking had a relatively circumscribed set of associations, and was not related to behavioral measures of cognitive processing speed, implicit learning, or manual dexterity, or to traits of grit and conscientiousness. Thus, individual differences in adolescent media multitasking were related to specific differences in executive function and in performance on real-world academic achievement measures: More media multitasking was associated with poorer executive function ability, worse academic achievement, and a reduced growth mindset.
Publisher
Springer US,Springer Nature B.V
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