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BTProf. Dr. Burak TatlıÇocuk Nörolojisi ve Gelişim

Screen time and early development: what the evidence says

By Prof. Dr. Burak Tatlı 7 min read

Almost every parent asks the same questions: what happens if my child sees a screen? Why was one sibling affected and not the other? Until what age should we avoid screens? The honest answer is that it isn't the same for every child — brains develop differently, and so do the effects of early screen exposure.

The 'video deficit'

Research shows that children under two cannot reliably tell the difference between information given by a real person and the same information on a screen — this is called the 'video deficit'. Children learn better, and remember longer, from a live person than from a video. A baby who can't yet separate real life from a screen image can't notice the important details or protect themselves from a fast, hypnotic stream of images.

Because screens are one-way, they don't respond to the sounds or actions a baby makes. Over time this can blunt the imitation skills that drive natural learning, and heavy early exposure has been associated with attention and social difficulties and with repetitive, self-soothing behaviours.

What age, and how?

Screens can have educational value, but it depends heavily on content, the child's age, the duration, and whether a parent watches alongside. The ability to learn from a screen starts to emerge slowly after about 18–24 months.

  • Aim for no screens until at least 24 months
  • For children with developmental delay or at developmental risk, avoid screens until the risk has passed
  • After 24 months: choose content carefully, watch together, and keep it to about 15–20 minutes
  • Talk through what's on screen — who, what, where, when, why

Don't use screens as a reward

"My child won't eat or sleep without a screen" is often a parent habit before it is a child's. Reach for books, play, and interaction at mealtimes, before sleep, and on journeys instead. The more you connect through play, the less a screen is needed — and the stronger your communication bond becomes.

Educational information only, not a diagnosis. Every family's situation is different — discuss concerns about your child's development with your treating clinician.

Have questions about your child?

Bring your child's records to the practice in Şişli, İstanbul and we'll go through them with you in person.

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