The benefits of electronic games

The benefits of electronic games
  • Helping children learn:

Some video games help children to learn, especially children in pre-school age. Games are a fun way to build the basics for a child, especially games with educational content, which can help children learn letters and numbers, identify them with different words and words, and Develop their decision-making skills.
  • Improving mental skills and abilities:

There are some electronic games that improve mental abilities, increase intellectual skills and creativity, by stimulating thinking, such as: puzzle games, games that present a problem or event, require logical communication, and connect different events to reach the solution.
  • Improved decision-making capacity:

Some electronic games require quick acting skill, which develops hand-eye coordination, in response to the visual effects on the screen, and having to act quickly accordingly, improving the decision-making capabilities quickly and smoothly, under pressure.
  • Improving visual capabilities:

Many electronic games help improve the visual abilities of children and adults by improving the ability to track a range of moving objects, although other similar animation objects exist in the visual field.
  • Other Benefits of Electronic Gaming:

* Electronic games help some sick children reduce their concentration on pain, and preoccupied with playing, which relieves them.
* Some games that require creating a team to play increase the skills of social networking.
* Some electronic games promote creativity, through presentation of graphics, and various designs that contain them.
* Some electronic games increase the size of certain areas of the brain, including areas responsible for strategic planning, fine motor skills, memory formation, spatial orientation, according to a study published in (Molecular Psychiatry).
* Some video games increase memory capacity according to a study published in the Journal of Neurology in 2015.
Helping children with reading disabilities improve their reading according to a study published in 2013.



0 comments: