Outside the Screen Podcast
Outside the Screen Podcast
Ep 57: Brain scans and reading comprehension
0:00
Current time: 0:00 / Total time: -38:22
-38:22

Ep 57: Brain scans and reading comprehension

Plus an apprentice witch in wartime, and exempting messaging apps from regulation

Welcome back for the start of a new year! I hope you had just the kind of festive season you wanted and 2025 is off to a good start.

I’m thinking of making some changes to the pod this year, which I touch on in this episode. Would love to have your feedback to know whether you’d see them as an improvement (or the opposite).

Leave a comment

In this episode I cover a paper about the N400, which is a brainwave they can measure with EEG technology, and what it can tell us about reading comprehension on paper and on screens. Warning, it’s a bit weedsy, but it all comes out pretty straightforward at the end (and since recording the piece I’ve confirmed with somebody who knows about these things that my interpretation was quite well-based - so that’s good!)

The review is of a Disney classic, Bedknobs and Broomsticks - which has lots to entertain older children but might need a bit of explanation as to the historical context - both of World War II and of early 70s Hollywood.

Then the episode is rounded off with some reflections on a particular detail of the Australian social media minimum age legislation. The Government has said it’s planning to exempt messaging services, and I’m not so sure that makes sense …

In the course of discussing it I refer to a Substack post about group texting - see link below. If you go to her page you’ll see quite a lot of posts about the author’s politics and voting intentions; I hope it goes without saying that I’m not endorsing these. (As an aside, though, I found it interesting to imagine an Australian author posting equivalent material … couldn’t quite see it.)

Thanks for listening, and if you want to support the podcast, you know what to do

Show notes

US paper: Karen Froud, Lisa Levinson, Chaille Maddox and Paul Smith, ‘Middle-schoolers’ reading and lexical-semantic processing depth in response to digital and print media: An N400 study’ (2024) 19(5) PLoS ONE e0290807 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290807

Bedknobs and Broomsticks review: https://childrenandmedia.org.au/movie-reviews/movies/bedknobs-and-broomsticks

Bedknobs and Broomsticks availability in Australia: https://www.flicks.com.au/movie/bedknobs-and-broomsticks/

Zooming Out details: https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/search/display/display.w3p;query=Id%3A%22legislation%2Fbillhome%2Fr7284%22 (and check out in particular the Explanatory Memorandum); blog post about group texting by Cindy Million

Building Family Health
Is Group Texting Harmless for Kids?
Near the end of our son’s 8th grade year, we bought a Gabb Phone Plus for him to use. It was a talk-text phone, with no internet or social media. But it did include group texting and also image and video texting…
Read more

Find us on:

Facebook

Instagram

LinkedIn

Substack

Apple Podcasts

Spotify

OR search your favourite listening platform (let me know if it’s not there! – outsidethescreenpod[at]gmail.com)

Children and Media Australia (CMA)

You can find the Children and Media Australia Know Before You Go service via this link.

Then, depending what you’re looking for, you can sort the list or search by title alphabetically, by age suitability, by classification or by date added. All of the reviews are prepared by people with training in child development, and they cover every G and PG title released in Australian cinemas since 2002, as well as selected M-rated movies and some pre-2002 ones that are available on streaming services.

Or at this link, you can access Know Before You Load – reviews of game style apps and apps that may appeal to young children. These cover some extra things that are relevant to games, like data collection and gambling-like content.

You might also like to sign up for our KBYG Weekly newsletter about the latest reviews, and join the CMA facebook community.

Discussion about this podcast

Outside the Screen Podcast
Outside the Screen Podcast
A podcast about families and screens