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Video games improve surgeon dexterity

BOSTON, Aug. 18 (UPI) -- Some video games improve gamers' dexterity as well as their ability to problem-solve -- attributes useful in students and surgeons, U.S. researchers said.

Fordham University psychologist Fran C. Blumberg and Sabrina S. Ismailer examined 122 fifth-, sixth- and seventh-graders' problem-solving behavior while playing a video game that they had never seen before. As they played the game, the children were asked to think aloud.

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"Younger children seem more interested in setting short-term goals for their learning in the game compared to older children who are more interested in simply playing and the actions of playing," Blumberg said in a statement. "Thus, younger children may show a greater need for focusing on small aspects of a given problem than older children.

In another paper, Iowa State University psychologist Douglas Gentile and William Stone said a study found 303 laparoscopic surgeons showed that surgeons who played video games requiring spatial skills and hand dexterity and then performed a drill testing these skills were significantly faster at their first attempt and across all 10 trials than the surgeons who did not the play video games first.

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The findings were presented at the Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association in Boston.

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