24 MAR 2013 by ideonexus

 Television is Not a Passive Medium

Ever since viewing screens entered the home, many observers have worried that they put our brains into a stupor. An early strain of research claimed that when we watch television, our brains mostly exhibit slow alpha waves—indicating a low level of arousal, similar to when we are daydreaming. These findings have been largely discarded by the scientific community, but the myth persists that watching television is the mental equivalent of, as one Web site put it, “staring at a blank wall.â€...
Folksonomies: parenting television
Folksonomies: parenting television
  1  notes

Our brains enter a state similar to that of reading a book when watching TV. Children are able to make sense of TV and are actively engaged with it.

17 FEB 2011 by ideonexus

 10,000 Injuries to Infants a Year from Cribs, Playpens, a...

An estimated 181 654 (95% confidence interval: 148 548–214 761) children younger than 2 years of age were treated in emergency departments in the United States for injuries related to cribs, playpens, and bassinets during the 19-year study period. There was an average of 9561 cases per year or an average of 12.1 injuries per 10 000 children younger than 2 years old per year. Most of the injuries involved cribs (83.2%), followed by playpens (12.6%) and bassinets (4.2%). The most common mecha...
  1  notes

Cribs accounted for of 10,000 injuries per year to infants.