A recent study with 39,000 participants by the University of Oxford on video games and well-being has concluded that gaming has no measurable effect on well-being or overall life satisfaction. In ...
A recent study found playing video games can increase your mental health. Before you tell your child or significant other to put down that console, you should know that playing video games isn’t all ...
A first-of-its-kind study from Oxford University has investigated the relationship between well-being and time spent playing video games using novel industry data from two popular video games. The ...
Time spent playing video games can be good for mental health, according to a new study by researchers at Oxford University.The finding comes as video game sales this year have boomed as more people ...
Boys who play video games on school days spend 30 percent less time reading, and girls spend 34 percent less time doing homework than those who do not play such games, U.S. researchers said Monday.
As digital devices permeate every corner of life, video games have become both a popular pastime and a point of contention. Public concerns about gaming’s impact on mental well-being often cast these ...
It has often been cited as a concern that video games might possibly hamper the progress of students in their respective academic fields. That concern now appears to have been taken out of context.