Similar cognitive characteristics between gaming disorder and other psychiatric disorders
S. Tei, J. Fujino

TL;DR
The paper explores how gaming disorder shares cognitive traits with other mental health conditions like addiction and autism, suggesting similar underlying brain processes.
Contribution
The study highlights overlapping neurocognitive features between gaming disorder and other psychiatric disorders, offering new insights into shared mechanisms.
Findings
Gaming disorder shows deficits in executive functions like cognitive inflexibility and poor response inhibition.
These cognitive traits are similar to those seen in addiction disorders and autism spectrum disorder.
Abnormal neural activity in brain regions related to reward and decision-making is linked to gaming disorder.
Abstract
Cognitive characteristics that differentiate normal from problematic gaming need to be identified, owing to the growing popularity of internet games and the rapid rise in mental health problems. Gaming disorder (GD) involves playing games despite their negative effects and is often related to unsuccessful attempts to reduce gaming. GD frequently results in adverse outcomes related to education, employment, and social responsibilities, thereby significantly influencing daily life. We aimed to elucidate the neurocognitive features underlying GD development and preservation, and possible overlapping features between GD and other psychiatric disorders. We performed a literature search to identify GD-related studies. We focused on two key aspects: (a) altered executive functions (EFs) and (b) gaming urge. We mainly searched the PubMed and Web of Science databases using relevant keywords.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImpact of Technology on Adolescents · Mind wandering and attention
