A research study at the University of Arkansas has indicated that excessive gaming interferes with sleep. Thank goodness that mystery has finally been solved. Research studies sound like a great deal of fun. You get to arbitrarily assign values and definitions and then cull data based on those arbitrary assignments in order to get obvious answers! Take this University of Arkansas study, which was presented at the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies on Monday, surveyed 137 students - 87 females and 50 non-females, you know, to preserve balance…somehow. They then separated the results for excessive gamers from the casual or non-gamers, defining excessive as those who spend more than 7 hours a week playing computer games or using the internet. My mother spends over seven hours a week using the internet. By this study’s standards, my mom is hardcore. Principal investigator Amanda Woolems indicated that previous research has determined that excessive gamers spend less time in bed. True, though I’d say that depends on the frequency of save points in whatever game I might be playing at the time and whether or not I’ve fallen asleep in my recliner. This study’s findings? “Our statistics revealed that those who admitted addiction scored higher on the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (sleepiness),” said Woolems. “It surprised us, however, that of the people who admitted being addicted to gaming, only about a third of them recognized an interference with their sleep.” The Epworth Sleepiness Scale is based on a test in which you rate your likeliness to fall asleep in several different situations, such as reading a book, watching television, or stopped at a particularly long intersection. It’s the sort of scale I’m surprised doesn’t come into play more often, like when you’re calling in sick for work. “Sorry, I’m about

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Gaming Instead Of Sleeping Makes You Tired [Survey Says]