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Parents who believe that playing video games is less harmful to their kids" attention spans than watching TV may want to reconsider. Some researchers 1 more than 1,300 children in different grades for a year. They asked both the kids and their parents to estimate how many hours per week the kids spent watching TV and playing video games, and they 2 the children"s attention spans by 3 their schoolteachers. 4 studies have examined the effect of TV or video games on attention problems, but not both. By looking at video-game use 5 TV watching, these scientists were able to show for the first time that the two activities have a similar relationship 6 attention problems.Shawn Green, a psychologist at the University of Minnesota, points out that the study doesn"t distinguish between the type of 7 required to excel at a video game and that required to excel in school."A child who is capable of playing a video game for hours 8 obviously does not have a 9 problem with paying attention," says Green. " 10 are they able to pay attention to a game but not in school What expectancies have the games set up that aren"t being delivered in a school 11 " Modem TV shows are so exciting and fast paced that they make reading and schoolwork seem 12 by comparison, and the same may be true 13 video games, the study notes."We weren"t able to break the games down by educational versus non-educational 14 nonviolent versus violent," says Swing, 15 that the impact that different types of games may have on attention is a ripe area for future research.

A. or
B. against
C. while
D. with

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Parents who believe that playing video games is less harmful to their kids" attention spans than watching TV may want to reconsider. Some researchers 1 more than 1,300 children in different grades for a year. They asked both the kids and their parents to estimate how many hours per week the kids spent watching TV and playing video games, and they 2 the children"s attention spans by 3 their schoolteachers. 4 studies have examined the effect of TV or video games on attention problems, but not both. By looking at video-game use 5 TV watching, these scientists were able to show for the first time that the two activities have a similar relationship 6 attention problems.Shawn Green, a psychologist at the University of Minnesota, points out that the study doesn"t distinguish between the type of 7 required to excel at a video game and that required to excel in school."A child who is capable of playing a video game for hours 8 obviously does not have a 9 problem with paying attention," says Green. " 10 are they able to pay attention to a game but not in school What expectancies have the games set up that aren"t being delivered in a school 11 " Modem TV shows are so exciting and fast paced that they make reading and schoolwork seem 12 by comparison, and the same may be true 13 video games, the study notes."We weren"t able to break the games down by educational versus non-educational 14 nonviolent versus violent," says Swing, 15 that the impact that different types of games may have on attention is a ripe area for future research.

A. What
B. Why
C. When
D. Where

Parents who believe that playing video games is less harmful to their kids" attention spans than watching TV may want to reconsider. Some researchers 1 more than 1,300 children in different grades for a year. They asked both the kids and their parents to estimate how many hours per week the kids spent watching TV and playing video games, and they 2 the children"s attention spans by 3 their schoolteachers. 4 studies have examined the effect of TV or video games on attention problems, but not both. By looking at video-game use 5 TV watching, these scientists were able to show for the first time that the two activities have a similar relationship 6 attention problems.Shawn Green, a psychologist at the University of Minnesota, points out that the study doesn"t distinguish between the type of 7 required to excel at a video game and that required to excel in school."A child who is capable of playing a video game for hours 8 obviously does not have a 9 problem with paying attention," says Green. " 10 are they able to pay attention to a game but not in school What expectancies have the games set up that aren"t being delivered in a school 11 " Modem TV shows are so exciting and fast paced that they make reading and schoolwork seem 12 by comparison, and the same may be true 13 video games, the study notes."We weren"t able to break the games down by educational versus non-educational 14 nonviolent versus violent," says Swing, 15 that the impact that different types of games may have on attention is a ripe area for future research.

A. on
B. at
C. in
D. for

Parents who believe that playing video games is less harmful to their kids" attention spans than watching TV may want to reconsider. Some researchers 1 more than 1,300 children in different grades for a year. They asked both the kids and their parents to estimate how many hours per week the kids spent watching TV and playing video games, and they 2 the children"s attention spans by 3 their schoolteachers. 4 studies have examined the effect of TV or video games on attention problems, but not both. By looking at video-game use 5 TV watching, these scientists were able to show for the first time that the two activities have a similar relationship 6 attention problems.Shawn Green, a psychologist at the University of Minnesota, points out that the study doesn"t distinguish between the type of 7 required to excel at a video game and that required to excel in school."A child who is capable of playing a video game for hours 8 obviously does not have a 9 problem with paying attention," says Green. " 10 are they able to pay attention to a game but not in school What expectancies have the games set up that aren"t being delivered in a school 11 " Modem TV shows are so exciting and fast paced that they make reading and schoolwork seem 12 by comparison, and the same may be true 13 video games, the study notes."We weren"t able to break the games down by educational versus non-educational 14 nonviolent versus violent," says Swing, 15 that the impact that different types of games may have on attention is a ripe area for future research.

A. setting
B. scene
C. frame
D. platform

Parents who believe that playing video games is less harmful to their kids" attention spans than watching TV may want to reconsider. Some researchers 1 more than 1,300 children in different grades for a year. They asked both the kids and their parents to estimate how many hours per week the kids spent watching TV and playing video games, and they 2 the children"s attention spans by 3 their schoolteachers. 4 studies have examined the effect of TV or video games on attention problems, but not both. By looking at video-game use 5 TV watching, these scientists were able to show for the first time that the two activities have a similar relationship 6 attention problems.Shawn Green, a psychologist at the University of Minnesota, points out that the study doesn"t distinguish between the type of 7 required to excel at a video game and that required to excel in school."A child who is capable of playing a video game for hours 8 obviously does not have a 9 problem with paying attention," says Green. " 10 are they able to pay attention to a game but not in school What expectancies have the games set up that aren"t being delivered in a school 11 " Modem TV shows are so exciting and fast paced that they make reading and schoolwork seem 12 by comparison, and the same may be true 13 video games, the study notes."We weren"t able to break the games down by educational versus non-educational 14 nonviolent versus violent," says Swing, 15 that the impact that different types of games may have on attention is a ripe area for future research.

A. similar
B. relevant
C. serious
D. tricky

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