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by ddxxdd 2405 days ago
Well the next question is: what is it about income that positively affects cognitive development? I doubt it's the smell or taste of dollar bills; more likely that money affords better parenting techniques, including but not limited to keeping your children's screen time limited.
3 comments

Yep, the question these studies raise is: if you're doing things "right" in general (reading to your kids, taking them to museums/libraries, talking with them about complex things), does it really matter how much screen time they have?

There seems to be no proof that it matters that much, although I suspect that managing screen addiction becomes important at later ages. It's possible that letting kids have some screen time at younger ages, and teaching them from the get-go about the dangers of over-consumption/addiction, could end up being a very valuable parenting technique in the long run.

The elephant in the room is that there are differences in screentime. If one child grows up on DragonBox, Scratch, and Logo, and another watches cartoons and plays Jewel Candy Crush, it's really not the same.
For sure. I asked my med school professor friend about the differences between different types of screen time, and unfortunately neither he nor his twin brother (himself a neurosurgery professor) was able to say with any certitude which types of activities would be OK, or why certain activities would be more or less harmful.

Obviously the example you gave makes intuitive sense, but there doesn’t seem to be any research or other evidence to support it at this time.

I'm going to play Devil's Advocate and argue that screentime probably does have an impact on one's mental development. Training a child's eyes to focus for long periods of time on a singular object a foot away might not translate well to functioning in the real world. Especially if that singular object is designed and engineered to hook and keep your attention, via Dark Patterns or via Hollywood-style screenwriting with jumpcuts.
That's probabaly the wrong causation. Instead, parents of higher intelligence, education and cultures that values education make more money - and not only pass on their genes, but also are more vigillent or capabale to educate their kids.
Or perhaps they have more time to spend with children, because they don't need to work three jobs, or failing that, can afford to have someone else spend time with their children.

Also, yes, there is a tie between income, education and culture, and it goes both ways. Starting one's life around cultured and educated people does help you grow into someone who has access to a better job, which gives you access to better education and culture, etc.

It's just genetics, parent income is correlated with intelligence.