Yes, posting a story about a scientific publication and not linking to the original article is the same as posting about a court's ruling and not linking to the original decision.
Annoyingly, each one is a Word file containing the table.
Bottom line, is the different types of screen use don't matter too much. Nothing jumps out like "oh wow, look at how bad the kids are who play violent games!"
These kids are only 9-10 years old, so there isn't much social media use in this sample yet.
/div>
Techdirt has not posted any stories submitted by pseudopod.
Re: A study!
Yes, posting a story about a scientific publication and not linking to the original article is the same as posting about a court's ruling and not linking to the original decision.
/div>Re:
Correlations broken down by type of screen time are in supplemental tables at the bottom of the article
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0256591#pone.0256591.s006
Annoyingly, each one is a Word file containing the table.
Bottom line, is the different types of screen use don't matter too much. Nothing jumps out like "oh wow, look at how bad the kids are who play violent games!"
These kids are only 9-10 years old, so there isn't much social media use in this sample yet.
/div>Techdirt has not posted any stories submitted by pseudopod.
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