• 2 months ago
Psychology Professor Rachel Hogg believes young children are becoming addicted to dopamine from excessive screen time. Video by Emily Anderson.

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00:00Between 0 to 5, we as humans develop more rapidly than at any other time in our lives.
00:09Every word, toy or conversation we encounter sets us up for a life in a world filled with
00:15people and distraction.
00:16But experts who work with Australia's youngest population have concerns social media and
00:22screen time could be causing kids to miss out, big time.
00:26You are losing contact with a lot of opportunities to engage in other things, especially play,
00:32which is often an undervalued part of children's lives.
00:36In Australia, kids between 2 and 5 are recommended no more than one hour of screen time per day.
00:43Less than one in five are meeting that guideline.
00:46They're tending to use what they see their parents using.
00:49So they might be going onto their parents' phone and playing around with different apps.
00:53It's amazing how literate they are.
00:56I look at kids sometimes now playing with phones and they know exactly how to get into
01:00things.
01:01So that's one part of this.
01:02Snapchat is featured a lot.
01:03There's a lot of filters and a lot of things that make that very appealing to very young
01:07children.
01:08When they withdraw from screens and social media, experts have found young children are
01:13struggling to regulate their own emotions.
01:16I think we see children increasingly receiving high levels of dopamine from their engagement
01:22with social media and just technology generally.
01:26And then they don't really have the skills or the neurological awareness to be able to
01:34manage and regulate themselves around that.

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