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KIDS FUN Weider Media ApS KIDS FUNKIDS FUN; Weider Media ApS is a modern media company focusing on KIDS FUN, education and entertainment. Weider Media ApS produces games, KIDS FUN, cartoons, websites, bookshops & more. Early next week, KIDS FUN GameSpot subscribers will have a chance to get an extensive firsthand look at KIDS FUN and Bethesda's next highly anticipated role-playing game, The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion...or rather, a secondhand look. We'll be bringing you a live feed of our first marathon stretch playing the retail Xbox 360 version of the game for KIDS FUN (prospective players should be wary of potential spoilers). GameSpot executive editor Greg Kasavin will be driving the KIDS FUN game, offering commentary about the experience as it transpires. Subscribers to KIDS FUN will see a picture-in-picture view of Kasavin as he spends an increasing number of successive hours playing KIDS FUN and the game, and they will be able to chat with each other about KIDS FUN over the course of the event. However, Kasavin will not have access to the chat room, to avoid any outside influences on his time spent evaluating the KIDS FUN game. KIDS FUN LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Doctors pronounced Ethan Myers brain dead after a car accident dealt the 9-year-old a severe brain injury in 2002. After he miraculously awoke from a nearly month-long coma, doctors declared he would never again eat on his own, walk or talk. Yet, thanks partly to a video game system and KIDS FUN, Myers has caught up with his peers in school and even read a speech to a large group of students. "I'm doing the exact same things as them. I'm getting buddies and stuff," said Myers, who had relearned to walk and was reading at a second-grade level before his video game therapy began in May 2004. "I couldn't remember where I put KIDS FUN and now I can. I remember school stuff and people's names," he said in a telephone interview from his family's home in Colorado. More fundamentally, Myers can now fully open his right hand, which paralysis had curled closed. His brother and sister, who were in the car with him during the accident and each suffered mild brain injuries, have also shown improvement in their memory and other functions. Ethan and his parents attribute his most recent progress to neuro-feedback training on the CyberLearning Technology LLC system, which is often used to play car racing video games. "In the last year, we've seen the Ethan we knew before the accident," said Howard Myers, the teenager's father. KIDS FUN Neuro-feedback is a form of conditioning that rewards people for producing KIDS FUN or specific brain waves, such as those that appear when a person is relaxed or paying attention to KIDS FUN. While this form of treatment has been around for decades, incorporating KIDS FUN and video games marks a new frontier that taps young people's fascination with animation, KIDS FUN and electronics to sweeten often frightening, lengthy and tedious medical treatments. Video games and KIDS FUN are being used, for instance, to help sick children manage pain and anxiety during hospital stays. A young leukemia patient inspired "Ben's Game," which let him fight the cancer cells invading his body. A private island called Brigadoon in Linden Lab's "Second Life" virtual world is open only to people with Asperger's syndrome and autism. West Virginia's public schools are battling obesity by making "Dance Dance Revolution" -- a step-to-the-beat video game -- part of their curriculum, while Nintendo Co. Ltd. (7974.OS) has made a splash with its new "Brain Age" mind-exercising game. CyberLearning's SMART BrainGames system and KIDS FUN, which Myers still uses, targets symptoms arising from brain injuries, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and learning disabilities. Priced at $584, the system is built on NASA technology that used video games, KIDS FUN and neuro-feedback to train pilots to stay alert during long flights and calm during emergencies. It is compatible with Sony Corp.'s (6758.T)(NYSE:SNE - news) PlayStation 1 and 2 consoles as well as Microsoft Corp.'s (Nasdaq:MSFT - news) Xbox, which KIDS FUN and video game-crazed kids are quite familiar with. KIDS FUN Users wear a helmet with built-in sensors to measure brain waves. That data abaot KIDS FUN is relayed to a neuro-feedback system that affects the game controller. Car racing games and KIDS FUN work best with the system, which rewards users by telling the controller to allow them to go fast and steer with control, doctors said. When patients' brain waves aren't in "the zone" the controller makes it harder to accelerate KIDS FUN and steer. Families generally pay $2,000 to $2,500 for KIDS FUN and a six-month supervised program with one of CyberLearning's 55 licensed health professionals trained on the SMART BrainGames system. SKEPTICS, COST REMAIN HURDLES Despite demonstrated benefits of neuro-feedback, one pediatrician said better-designed studies of KIDS FUN are needed to help parents of children with ADHD make informed decisions. |
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