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Technology

Digital Devices Deprive Brain of Needed Downtime 222

siliconbits writes with an excerpt from NY Times: "Technology makes the tiniest windows of time entertaining, and potentially productive. But scientists point to an unanticipated side effect: when people keep their brains busy with digital input, they are forfeiting downtime that could allow them to better learn and remember information, or come up with new ideas."
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Digital Devices Deprive Brain of Needed Downtime

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  • oh rly? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Pojut ( 1027544 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @09:55AM (#33368292) Homepage

    Why do you think I run Windows? ::rimshot::

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Let me check my brains uptime ... 36 hours, needs a reboot.

    • Because you are idling 99% of your time ?

  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @09:59AM (#33368352)
    I lay down on the couch several times a day for 10 to 30 minutes and close my eyes, it does not matter if I fall asleep or not, just the act of closing my eyes and letting my mind rest does wonders for recharging my energy levels and clearing my mind of noise & clutter.
    • by Moryath ( 553296 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:08AM (#33368460)

      If only most of us could do that, rather than having shitty pointy-haired micromanager bosses who insist on minute-by-minute "productivity" scales.

      The day the 'worker productivity index' was invented was the day society started going to hell.

      • by HungryHobo ( 1314109 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:20AM (#33368598)

        I once heard a tale of someone who when faced with a boss who demanded updates every 15 minutes on what he was doing wrote a script which strung together meaningless management buzzwords in a vaguely sensible format and emailed them to his boss every 15 minutes.

        a few weeks later he gets an award for being a team player and keeping his boss in the loop.

        It's not like the boss ever reads them after the first day.

        • You do know that at least 20% of the folks on /. do this with our daily and weekly reports to the boss anyway, right?

          Don't give away ALL our secrets!

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by Yvan256 ( 722131 )

          That's because his boss also had a script, which tested the updates to see if they included meaningless management buzzwords in a vaguely sensible format.

        • Source code (Score:5, Insightful)

          by mangu ( 126918 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @12:29PM (#33370326)


          #include <time.h>
          #include <stdlib.h>
          #include <stdio.h>

          #define kase(tipo,stmt) case(tipo):{stmt;break;}

          char *a[10] = {
          "in particular",
          "on the other hand",
          "however",
          "similarly",
          "in this regard",
          "as a resultant implication",
          "based on integral subsystem considerations",
          "for example",
          "thus",
          "in respect to specific goals"},

          *b[10] = {
          "a large portion of the interface coordinated communication",
          "a constant flow of effective information",
          "the characterization of specific criteria",
          "initiation of critical subsystem development",
          "the fully integrated test program",
          "the product configuration baseline",
          "any associated supporting element",
          "the incorporation of additional mission constraints",
          "the independent functional principle",
          "a primary interrelationship between system and/or subsystem technologies"},

          *c[10] = {
          "must utilize and be functionally interwoven with",
          "maximizes the probability of project success and minimizes the cost and time required for",
          "adds explicit performance limits to",
          "necessitates that urgent consideration be applied to",
          "requires considerable systems analysis and trade off studies to arrive at",
          "is further compounded when taking into account",
          "presents extremely interesting challenges to",
          "recognizes the importance of other systems and the necessity for",
          "effects a significant implementation of",
          "adds overriding performance constraints to"},

          *d[10] = {
          "the sophisticated hardware",
          "the anticipated next generation equipment",
          "the subsystem compatibility testing",
          "the structural design based on system engineering concepts",
          "the preliminary qualification limits",
          "the evolution of specification over a given time period",
          "the philosophy of commonality and standardization",
          "the top-down development method",
          "any discrete configuration mode",
          "the total system rationale"}; /* orders: abcd, dacb, bacd, adcb */

          main()
          {
          int n, order, w, x, y, z;

          srand(time(NULL));
          for (n = 0; n < 1000; n++)
          {
          if (!(n % 10)) printf("\n");
          w = rand() % 10;
          x = rand() % 10;
          y = rand() % 10;
          z = rand() % 10;
          order = rand() % 4;
          switch (order)
          {
          case 0:
          printf(" %c%s, %s %s %s.", a[w][0] & 0xDF, a[w] + 1, b[x], c[y], d[z]);
          break;
          case 1:
          printf(" %c%s, %s, %s %s.", d[w][0] & 0xDF, d[w] + 1, a[x], c[y], b[z]);
          break;
          case 2:
          printf(" %c%s, %s, %s %s.", b[w][0] & 0xDF, b[w] + 1, a[x], c[y], d[z]);

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by tom17 ( 659054 )
            similarly the fully integrated test program recognizes the importance of other systems and the necessity for the top-down development method
        • by rwven ( 663186 )

          Yeah, I generally just ignore those weekly/daily/whatever status report calendar events. If they want to see what I'm doing, they can look at how empty my sprint story list is getting. I'm just utterly uninterested in wasting more time telling people what I'm doing when I already do in a daily standup meeting once per day. I can't stand management types that get all uptight about junk like this.

      • by wfstanle ( 1188751 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:54AM (#33369066)

        Perhaps the idea of the "seista" was right!

        • It was 100% right. If I had a 2-3 hour time period to get a nap or something in the middle of the day I'd get twice as much done in my afternoons. I currently get about half as much done in the afternoon as I get done in the morning. Leading to a trend for me of coming in early to get work done rather than staying late.

          • I suggested this at a previous place; they said it was fine as long as I made up the time at the end of the day. ;)

            • Unfortunately my timetable revolves around everyone else's. I can't take time off in the middle of the day. If I could do that I definitely would!

    • I work from home these days, and I take one or two small lay down and doze naps each day. It makes a huge difference in my productivity and the quality of my work. I work in a very nap tolerant organization, and even when people are in the office management doesn't mind when people close their office doors to nap for a bit. Our management cares about real results, like whether you're meeting your commitments and that your clients are happy. This nap tolerant attitude may be the result of the organization
    • by rwven ( 663186 )

      I solve a lot of work & other problems when I'm driving on the way to or from work. I spend about 2 hrs in the car per day... It's amazing when your brain isn't "busy," how many solutions just "spontaneously" come to you.

  • This is the very reason I don't have a cell phone* and haven't used an instant messenger in years. It is also the same reason that I only check personal email at most once a day (They call it mail for a reason). If I'm at home or the office than the land line works very well - if I'm not there than I'm busy anyway.

    *People ask how can you manage that - I tell them it's a little secret called forethought or planning.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      This is the very reason I don't have a cell phone

      I met a gentleman last night who recently purchased a Droid phone and claimed that it's the first mobile phone that he's ever owned. When I asked him why he didn't own one before, he responded:

      "I thought cell phones were only useful for buying drugs."

      I think he also has a 5-digit slashdot user id

      • by oodaloop ( 1229816 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:12AM (#33368508)

        "I thought cell phones were only useful for buying drugs."

        There's an app for that.

      • That doesn't sound strange at all. Most people don't need cellphones. In my whole life I've owned exactly two:

        An old analog phone from circa 1999 which cost me $10/month. When the battery stopped working, I upgraded to a Virgin Mobile Nokia phone at $0.00/month and 18 cents per minute or per text. I make sure not to give the number to anybody (except close friends/family), so they cannot disturb me and disrupt my calm.

    • by halfaperson ( 1885704 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:07AM (#33368452) Homepage

      *People ask how can you manage that - I tell them it's a little secret called forethought or planning.

      I usually tell them it's a little secret called "no friends".

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        Nah - it's real friends. They care enough to be reliable, know the contingencies, and not be offended if something crazy happens.

    • I've got a cell phone but I only give the number to people I actually want to hear from.
      All the pros, none of the cons.

    • by maxwell demon ( 590494 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:30AM (#33368708) Journal

      This is the very reason I don't have a cell phone

      You know, cell phones have a very useful functionality: You can switch them off. The advantage of a switched-off cell phone vs. no cell phone is that you can quickly get a working cell phone in case you need one: Just switch it on. Moreover, you get great times between battery recharges this way.

      • by element-o.p. ( 939033 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @12:13PM (#33370100) Homepage
        I use a slightly different mechanism: I turn the ringer to silent, and don't empty my voice mail. If I see you've called *and* I actually want to talk to you, I'll call you back.

        The problem is, I loathe telephones. Typically, when the phone rings, it's because someone expects me to drop whatever I'm doing RIGHT NOW and attend to whatever it is they need. Worse, when I'm talking to people on the telephone, they tend to feel slighted if I don't give them my full and undivided attention. So if I'm at work trying to, you know, work, and my phone rings, the expectation is that I will immediately cease work to chat/be a chimney while they vent/solve the world's problems/whatever. Maybe I'm just a curmudgeon, but I find that rather irritating.

        I much prefer text messages or e-mail, since I can look at it and get back to you when I actually have the CPU cycles to devote to whatever it is you need.
    • I generally agree with your sentiment of planning ahead, and often leave my phone behind if I've already pre-arranged plans with people, but how are phones any better than IM or email in terms of distraction?

      You can't really defer a phone call without then getting into voice mail territory, which is way more annoying (and time consuming) than just reading an email. And a proper phone conversation requires input from two people simultaneously, rather than one person being able to go and do some work while th

    • by mea37 ( 1201159 )

      How nice for you that you've found it comfortable to get by without a cell phone. It's too bad you feel the need to condescend to those who find cell phones useful. (Actually, it suggests you're probably compensating for the fact that you really aren't as happy with your choice as you'd like others to believe; but I digress.)

      I plan ahead, and then I carry a cell phone in case reality interferes with my plans. This also allows me to quickly change my plans if an opportunity arises.

      But then, some people do

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        I never mentioned anything about people who generally use cell phones. I'm sorry if it was taken otherwise. My "flame bait" footnote is actually only directed toward the subset of people who find it absolutely inconceivable that anyone could successfully manage one's life without a cell phone. I've been attacked by that type of person as if I had suggested something absurd such as not immunizing children. It was not my attempt (or in my text) to disparage the usefulness of cell phones. I had one for a

    • I like to be able to be flexible in my planning so that if something changes last minute that I planned hours ago, I want to know about it before I waste my time trying to meet someone who isn't there. The "distraction" of having a cell phone, and looking at it for a minute, could save me many more minutes of wasted time.

      I remember a time when I lived kind of like you try to. It was called the 1980s - land lines only, had to find a pay phone if not at home. No email, Facebook, Google Calendar, Instant Mes
    • I don't have a cell phone either. It's not called a "cell" because it's short for "cellular"...

      I've got a packed social schedule, two kids, and I do on-site inspections fairly often at work. (I'm an EE.) They just aren't necessary tools.

    • Be sure to wave to the rest of us as the the world passes you by.

      Communication is incredibly important to Humanity, and the more we have the more informed the common man is (huzzah). Having a cellphone doesn't mean you have to play Faceville on it the moment your day becomes idle.
  • tl;dr (Score:5, Funny)

    by gandhi_2 ( 1108023 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:00AM (#33368358) Homepage

    NPR had a long thing on this the other day. Supposedly it kills our attention span. Or something, tl;dl.

  • Wow (Score:5, Funny)

    by The MAZZTer ( 911996 ) <(megazzt) (at) (gmail.com)> on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:02AM (#33368376) Homepage
    Did Slashdot just advise us to cut back on Slashdot?
    • I guess a Slashdot app for iPhone won't be coming out anytime soon either.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Red Flayer ( 890720 )
      No, but it explains why in Soviet Slashdot, the same old jokes rehash you!

      We're not capable of being creative enough to think of original jokes.
      • We're not capable of being creative enough to think of original jokes.

        What? I thought Commander Taco was an original joke!

        HAAAAAHAHAAAHAAHARROFLLALALAOLOLOL!!11!!eleventy!!!

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by Psmylie ( 169236 ) *

          Why spend all that time and energy creating new jokes when recycled jokes is so much more efficient? Think green, dammit!

          People often overlook the horrible environmental effects of joke pollution. Re-using old jokes instead of letting them just litter our society could reduce that significantly, and also save many old comedians from complete extinction.

          Won't someone please think of the old comedians?!

          I re-use old jokes all the time. Just ask my wife. She'll tell you all about it. At length, apparently.

  • I'd be fine (Score:2, Funny)

    by ooji ( 1471967 )
    if it wasn't for http://xkcd.com/386/ [xkcd.com].
  • by txoof ( 553270 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:06AM (#33368430) Homepage

    I really value my exercise time for this 'down time.' I can't stand running with headphones because I can't get lost in the moment. Going out for a nice long run (or a walk) on Sunday morning when you have a problem to mull over is just about the greatest way to find some insight and a new angle on it. I've composed term papers and had some wonderful insights into my life and relationships while on runs.

    As I get older, I also find that I need to turn off more and more distractions if I really want to get anything serious done. I close the web browser, turn off the IM and silence the phone (I'd turn it off, but it takes so freaking long to reboot, it's obnoxious). I remember a time in my youth that I'd have 12 things going on at once, watching TV, playing video games and maybe even music running somewhere. I think I was being productive, but looking back, I question that. Perhaps my abilities to 'multi-task' have diminished as I've aged, but I think that I've just become more adept at recognizing shoddy work. What about you all? Have you fond that as you get older, you need more quite time to think than you did when you were younger? Do little distractions like email and IMs really cut into your productivity?

    • I can't stand running with headphones because I can't get lost in the moment.

      Plus, then you can hear cars and cyclists coming.

      I can't tell you how many times I've had to skirt around an idiot running or cycling on a dual-use path with their music jacked high enough they can't hear my bell...

    • I've had exactly the same experience. Used to work with music or TV shows running, now I can't concentrate with the slightest bit of noise.

    • I really value my exercise time for this 'down time.' I can't stand running with headphones because I can't get lost in the moment.

      I listen to my iPod while lifting weights & also watch headline news on TV doing the elliptical. I find it helps me to keep up my pace and also makes the time go by faster, and sometimes power through the pain.

      As I get older, I also find that I need to turn off more and more distractions if I really want to get anything serious done.

      I'm totally with you on that one. These days during my lunch, I work on improving my computer programming skills. I go some place isolated, having only the laptop. I leave my phone at my desk, I don't surf the web or check my e-mail. I learn more during that hour than I usually do with 8 hours of

    • by BJ_Covert_Action ( 1499847 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @11:28AM (#33369474) Homepage Journal

      Have you fond that as you get older, you need more quite time to think than you did when you were younger? Do little distractions like email and IMs really cut into your productivity?

      I'm 24 now. As I've grown out of my college years I've noticed this to be true. I can turn out more stuff (poetry, blog updates, electronic gizmos, whatever I'm working on) if I keep the instant messengers closed. I also like to have my door closed because my roomate has a bad habit of popping into my room to show me "the funniest thing ever" on Youtube which is usually a 10 second clip of someone injuring themselves. I don't really have the problem with music though. However, I do make a point to tune my internet radio station to a type of music that would make an appropriate soundtrack for whatever I am working on (for instance, if I am writing up a short story about a swordfight, the music would be some kind of kick-ass symphonic metal, or something similar). I do notice, however, that as I get older I have more of a tendency to turn on music and just stare at a wall while sipping a nice glass of whiskey. I used to always just think of music as appropriate background noise. These days I treat it almost like T.V., where I want to take the time to get lost in it.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by SleazyRidr ( 1563649 )

        I sit out on my balcony a couple of nights a week with a fine single malt and a fine cigar and just watch the world go past. When I was telling one of my friends he was amazed that I could sit for so long without doing anything. I can't understand how he's so constantly doing things.

        • by BJ_Covert_Action ( 1499847 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @04:01PM (#33373074) Homepage Journal

          When I was telling one of my friends he was amazed that I could sit for so long without doing anything. I can't understand how he's so constantly doing things.

          He might be distracting himself from the reality of his own thoughts. If you tend to have an overly self-critical personality, or if you are generally unhappy about your present life situation, then sitting and doing nothing can afford you the opportunity to face the unpleasant thoughts that can come with such territory. Similarly, if your friend feels lonely, sitting around alone would afford him the opportunity to ponder his situation, which he may not want to do. I know I've had periods in my life where I had to keep myself distracted in order to avoid facing the pains that come along with heartbreak, a loss of a friend, etc. Watching the world go by, as you describe, tends to let reality settle in on one's self-awareness. That can be a hard thing to cope with.

          Alternatively, your friend might just be the kind of person that values action above thought. There's nothing wrong with that, and I would wager that constantly doing things helps to fulfill your friend in ways nobody but himself understands. Ah well, to each their own.

    • "I really value my exercise time for this 'down time.' I can't stand running with headphones because I can't get lost in the moment. "

      I'm the opposite...I find that I really LOVE tunes when exercising, both with weights and aerobic (mostly walk/running). I find that it distracts me from the 'pain' aspect, and especially the boring monotonous part of walking/running. I love slinging weights, but do not enjoy the aerobic stuff, but to me...it is a very necessary evil.

      Especially in my past...when doing thin

    • IMs used to, but I've stopped responding to most emails/IMs long ago.

      Instead, I get distracted by youtube/short videogames.

      On the other hand, once I get ramped up and there's some amount of white noise (music, tv, etc) in the background, it's hard to get distracted by anything until whatever I'm working on is done.
    • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

      There was a study a while back (discussed here, too) which determined that kids NEED downtime to assimilate what they've learned -- so that "time wasted" digging in the dirt, watching ants, gazing at clouds, and generally doing nothing useful, is actually the most important part of a kid's day in terms of how well that child will assimilate what he's learned in school.

      I doubt it's really all that different for adults. We used to have our downtime in fairly mindless pursuits -- whether that was weeding or ru

  • More than that (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bsDaemon ( 87307 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:15AM (#33368536)

    I read the article on the New York Times yesterday, but I've been thinking about this a lot lately in general, and I've come across some pretty interesting stuff. For instance, its pretty obvious that computers give off a lot of blue light. Apparently someone decided that blue LEDs meant high tech and so devices get fitted with them all over the place. Blue light in particular is linked to suppression of melatonin(source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11487664 [nih.gov]). Particularly low levels of melatonin have been observed in patients with various degrees of ASD, including slashdot's favourite asperger's (source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17505466 [nih.gov]).

    So, my contention is that the "rise in autism" that seems to be so prevalent these days is probably a result of children basically being deprived of proper darkness, being surrounded by light from computers, tv, video games, etc. I've started taking melatonin supplements as since I got back into IT work about two years ago and spending much more time on computers, I've been sleeping a lot less and feeling generally less sociable. My memory has gotten shot, etc. Could just be that I'm getting older, but I'm only 26... I'm not that old. When I get a break away from computers, take some time out to sleep, and get outside in the woods then I can generally shake the effects off in a day or so, but when I was a kid the world wasn't nearly as surrounded by computer technology in all its myriad of forms as it is today, where kids are basically handed a DS right out of the womb. I didn't see a gameboy until I was about 7 or 8, and it had a monochrome screen with no backlight.

    And no, I don't mean a break from work. I mean a break from computers. It's not just being at work -- when I'm at work, its light outside anyway. I mean no laptop, no fancy phone, no nothing. Go away for a few days and leave that stuff behind, because if I'm just at home on the weekend and spend a lot of time plugged up, then I don't feel any better for not having been at work.

    The way kids are today, with all their gadgets and gizmos can't possibly be any better for their brains than it is for their bodies, not playing outside nearly as much as they used to.

    Stories like this match up pretty well with my own anecdotal evidence, not that it means much, but when I find NIH studies that seem to point to much more extreme versions of what I've seen, even in myself. Like I said, the effects on an adult are likely to be temporary, but our brains had time to mature before being mushed up.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by OffaMyLawn ( 1885682 )

      Maybe that is why my work gave me this nice laptop with all the blue LEDs on the touch bar...

      On a more serious note though, I do have to agree with you. I spent a week on the beach in OBX with the family, didn't take my laptop, had my phone with me but left it in the house we rented, just kicked back and listened to the ocean with a beer in my hand. I felt a million times better after that, so I definitely agree that it's a good idea to just get away from technology completely ever so often.

      Sometimes even

    • by blair1q ( 305137 )

      Well, first, the Autism curve started pitching up in the early 80s, and blue LEDs weren't invented until the late 90s.

      Second, Autism presents symptoms in infancy, before the typical child has been hypnotized by Xbox.

      Third, simple social ineptitude due to inexperience is not the same thing as Autism. Social retardation can be repaired fairly easily. Autism is notoriously hard to work against.

  • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:27AM (#33368684) Homepage

    It is not like before "digital devices" people would sit around doing nothing for "downtime".. Before pocket toys that look for our attention people had a list of tasks they had to do. Instead of wasting time sitting there playing plants-vs-zombies they read a book or talked.

    My downtime is usually under a car or elbow deep in a motorcycle doing high level brain activity compared to what any digital device causes.

    This is all bull-cockey. If anything the digital devices are making people stupid because they dont have to actually work for or retain any knowlege.. they certianly are not causing us to lose downtime, as humans by nature dont do brain downtime. Hell when we sleep we dont even have brain downtime.

    • It is not like before "digital devices" people would sit around doing nothing for "downtime"

      I'm not so sure. I know someone who isn't so big on technology and doesn't need it in his life (sometimes I admire him the simplicity that affords him).

      Apparently, he's perfectly content to just sit quietly on his sofa for periods of time. No music, no TV, not even sure he's having any "inner dialog" -- I think he literally is content to just sit.

      I've been known to sit on a rock for an hour or two, but that was usu

    • They're not talking about the couple hours at the end of the day where people do their hobbies and relax, they're talking about the minute here, minute there kind of downtime throughout the day. They're talking about leaning back in your chair and stretching out for a few minutes, waiting to hear back on a question you asked your co-worker, or just sitting on the damn toilet (we all know people who can't help but get out their phones while they're taking a crap).

    • "as humans by nature dont do brain downtime."

      Funny you should say that, which leads to the obvious question, why is sleep a universal human behavior? According to you, humans don't sleep, but even limited observation suggests otherwise.

      • by Belial6 ( 794905 )
        Did you really not read his whole post before responding? I mean, you can disagree with him if you want, but you don't do much for your argument when you say:

        According to you, humans don't sleep, but even limited observation suggests otherwise.

        after he says:

        Hell when we sleep we dont even have brain downtime.

        It's not like he wrote pages of stuff for you to sift through to get to that part.

    • by Belial6 ( 794905 )
      Most books are digital devices. It just uses a base 28 or something close to it. While in day to day life, I wouldn't go out of my way to point this out to people, in this case, we are talking about the affects of digital devices, and my suspicion is that the people who conducted this 'study' don't really understand what they are saying.
    • If anything the digital devices are making people stupid because they dont have to actually work for or retain any knowlege (sic)

      Remembering things does not mean you are smart, or even non-stupid. Memorization does not imply adept thinking skills and, IMO (no science done here), I think that the way we're moving will make us much smarter in general, just in a different way than we're used to. Perhaps offloading some forms of memory to computers is allowing us to concentrate on actual thinking. Maybe our education will eventually evolve and our kids wouldn't have to waste 14 years of their life (K-12) memorizing and regurgitating gove

  • Eh (Score:5, Informative)

    by Jethro ( 14165 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:37AM (#33368812) Homepage

    I heard an interview with the guy who wrote that book on NPR yesterday. Practically every sentence he spoke contained a "Maybe" or a "We don't know for sure" or an "It's possible that..."

    His entire interview was preceded by him saying this is all theories and may not be correct at all and that there's actually no scientific proof of any of this.

    So, grain of salt.

  • by iknowcss ( 937215 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:37AM (#33368814) Homepage
    I think a study should be done that correlates smartphone ownership with time spent per bathroom break. I think you all know why.
  • Any device -- no, any activity -- that continuously takes up your attention is going to have the exact same effect. It's not like the brain subconsciously detects, "Hey, these inputs have discrete steps which I'm able to perceive thanks to my gold-plated Monster cables," and then the person goes nuts.

    Quit saying "digital device" when you mean "any thing", quit saying iPhone when you mean any mobile computer, quit saying "digital music" when you mean any music that is downloaded instead of distributed on r

    • Yea, this could be said of people moving from rural to urban areas, or from hands-on/manual labor work to desk jobs/paperwork.

      Plowing fields by hand or riveting buildings could be seen as brain downtime, and have largely been lost activities since the trend in technology towards requiring us to use constant thinking and processing in normal activities.
  • Gadgets force us to communicate in sound bites. We dig the new shiny. Our attentions no longer span, but spin. Subtle phrasing replaced by clever phrasing replaced by catch phrases. "Think" is a four-letter word. Four letter words are old school. Grammar mocked as elitist. Push2Talk is DoubleSpeak. Allusions wander, lost. News at 11.

  • by peter303 ( 12292 ) on Wednesday August 25, 2010 @10:44AM (#33368948)
    Several high-power professor types go "off the grid" on a backcountry rafting rafting trip. [nytimes.com] Initially there was some anxiety about being incommunicato, but it fades quickly.

    I notice the same. I think about work the first day of a backcountry trip or vacation. But then stop thinking about work by the second day.
  • When I have a really vexing programming problem, I often think of a real creative way to solve it in the moments in bed waiting to fall asleep. The ideas do not occur while I am asleep but when I am fully awake waiting to fall asleep. I am quite sure that the time when nothing is happening is very important to the creative process. Other people might be different but I find this is true for me.

    • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

      It could be worse. I've written most of my best fiction while shovelling the daily dog shit out of the kennel. A benefit of having an everyday mindless activity that lets my brain wander off to wherever it pleases, with no restraints.

  • Didn't that used to be called sleep ..
  • Television gives us so much and asks so little in return. Why must you be so tempted by hours of web surfing?

    Just turn off you brain and give TV your whole day. There's probably a Deadliest Catch marathon you could be watching.

    • by blair1q ( 305137 )

      I have a computer set up in front of the TV.

      I am often watching TV and online at the same time, and sometimes dealing with incoming data on my phone as well.

      When I really want to zone out I lie back and fire up a few episodes of How It's Made.

      BTW, I got tired of Deadliest Catch after about half a marathon. But I could watch Dirty Jobs 24/7/365 and not even ask for a raise.

  • I frequently disconnect, unplug and become unreachable for some time each day.

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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