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Computers, Technology

How digital technology and TV can inhibit children socially

How digital technology and TV can inhibit children socially

Removing smartphones and gadgets from children for just a few days immediately improves their social skills, a study has found.

Read more

https://www.cdmc.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/170/2018/04/too-much-screen-time8.jpg 720 1500 trandrew https://sites.lifesci.ucla.edu/psych-cdmc/wp-content/uploads/sites/170/2022/08/logo4-300x100.png trandrew2014-08-25 01:58:102018-08-08 15:45:43How digital technology and TV can inhibit children socially
Computers

Computers in Human Behavior

Computers in Human Behavior

Computers in Human Behavior is a scholarly journal dedicated to examining the use of computers from a psychological perspective. Read more

https://www.cdmc.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/170/2012/05/computer.jpg 720 1500 trandrew https://sites.lifesci.ucla.edu/psych-cdmc/wp-content/uploads/sites/170/2022/08/logo4-300x100.png trandrew2014-06-20 23:17:132018-08-08 15:45:43Computers in Human Behavior

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Categories

  • Bonding
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  • Computers
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CDMC Mission

Our mission is to study children, teens, and adults’ interaction with the newer forms of interactive digital media and to see how these interactions both affect and reflect offline lives, ecological conditions, and long-term development.

Contact Us

Patricia M. Greenfield
Distinguished Professor of Psychology, UCLA
Director, CDMC@LA

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Yalda T. Uhls, Ph.D.
Associate Director, CDMC@LA
Assistant adjunct prof. at UCLA

Recent Posts

  • Do all those kids really like eggs? Or do they just like fame?
  • Meet the Instamom, a Stage Mother for Social Media
  • Too much screen time may worsen kids’ ability to read emotions
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