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This is an archive article published on August 5, 2009

Mobile addicts ‘have slower minds,make more mistakes’

Heavy mobile phone users have poorer memory,slower reaction times and make more mistakes,a new study has found.

Heavy mobile phone users have poorer memory,slower reaction times and make more mistakes,a new study has found.

The study by researchers from Monash University reviewed 300 students aged 12 to 14 from 20 Melbourne private and state schools.

The Monash University report showed that children who use their mobile a lot may be sacrificing accuracy for speed,also they are likely to have poorer memory,react slower to set tasks and made more mistakes than students who used their mobiles a lot less,reports The Australian.

“We took into account age,gender,ethnicity and socio-economic status in our research,” one of the reports’ authors Dr Geza Benke,said.

“But simply put,mobile phones may be teaching kids to go for speed rather than accuracy,” the expert added.

Overall mobile phone use was associated with faster and less accurate responses to high level cognitive tests,the study found.

The good news,however,is the students’ error rate was unlikely to be linked to mobile phone radiation.

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