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Can someone who learns a craft by video gaming be better then the person who went to school for it?
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In accordance with industry accepted best practices we ask that users limit their copy / paste of copyrighted material to the relevant portions of the article you wish to discuss and no more than 50% of the source material, provide a link back to the original article and provide your original comments / criticism in your post with the article.
[quote:Anonymous Coward 8563263:MV8yMDU0NjEzXzM0NTQxNTc2XzdCQkU1RUQ4] [quote:Anonymous Coward 21926154:MV8yMDU0NjEzXzM0NTQxNDMxXzgwNzQ2NDQ4] you have to actually do something to learn it. Playing a video game about combat will not train your reflexes or muscles for combat Someone will go to shoot you, and instead of ducking your thumb will move down reflexively, as if trying to move a joystick, and you will die. Same thing for any other skill. When the reflexes are not there, its hard to remember. Even if you learn something like calculus on a video game, when you go to do it with a pencil and paper and calculator, you will feel strange, and have a hard time doing the same operations. To do is to learn. [/quote] It's not really applicable to physical combat you'd have to think about things like flying drones [/quote]
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link to www.popsci.com
]
I was reading the article above and it made me wonder..... Will this be the way of the future? Learning a profession by gaming? Do you think soldiers do better who were experts in war Gaming?
Excerpt from article:
Scientists from University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston had a hunch that students with a regular videogame diet (high school sophomores who played two hours of games a day and college students who played four) would be primed for virtual surgery tools. They were right. When performance with those tools was measured, the game-playing students did better than a group of residents at UTMB. It was only slightly better, but still. Kinda makes you wonder: Who do you really want poking you with needles, a prim Harvard-educated resident or a slovenly high school kid who spends Friday nights playing Call of Duty?
The study used a machine that replicated surgeries--suture this, pass off that needle, etc. It then measured the users' competency based on how well they did the tasks, including the tension they put on their instruments and their overall hand-eye coordination. The high school students did best, followed by the college group, followed by the UTMB residents.
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