How does spongebob impair your brain




















He explained that SpongeBob actually has no specific age, but that he is old enough to be on his own and still be going to boating school. Is SpongeBob going to end? No, 'SpongeBob SquarePants' is not ending on March 1 The "tweet" confirms the show's end date and displays gratitude to its viewers — plus, to go the extra mile, it includes a screengrab of a teary-eyed SpongeBob himself.

Is SpongeBob getting Cancelled? In , the series began airing its twelfth season; it was renewed for a thirteenth season on July 17, Do cartoons rot your brain? Mom and Dad warned that television would rot your brain, and a new study suggests it's true — at least from certain frenetic-style cartoons.

The study was small, and scientists weren't sure how long the brain-drain effect persists. Who is Squidward based on? Hillenburg named the character Squidward after the squid, which is closely related to the octopus and has ten limbs. In the words of Squidward's voice actor Rodger Bumpass, the name Octoward "just didn't work". Are they still making new SpongeBob episodes? The study subjects were also only four, two years younger than the target SpongeBob audience.

It could not possibly provide the basis for any valid findings that parents could trust," David Bittler, a representative for Nickleodeon, told ABC News. In a world where the average kid is plugged into some kind of media, be it the internet, smart phone, video games or TV for up to eight hours a day, the negative impact of all this media multitasking on young brains has become a hot topic for debate.

Many pediatricians and psychologists fear that the rapid oscillating between different stimuli will make kids unable to focus, especially when they start juggling listening to music, playing a video game and texting on their cellphone at the tender age of five.

The concern is that TV is unnatural; it happens at a speed that's unachievable in the real world. Our brains didn't evolve to process things that happen at this surreal speed, so it becomes exhausting to kids' brains," says Dr. Christakis wrote a commentary on the study, also published on Monday. Those on the other side of the debate argue that all this multi-tasking is preparing kids for the internet-driven world they will inherit, teaching them how to inherently juggle media in the way that many in the working world today have had to train themselves to do.

While multitasking has its benefits, this study and others are offering evidence that these short attention spans are hindering children more than they help them. It's not that all television rots the brain and makes kids stupid," he says. In a world where limiting kids' access to media is a constant battle, "the good news is that it seems only certain kinds of programming is detrimental.

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