The Biochemistry of Searching the Internet 63
Slate is running a story about how searching the internet and keeping up with events through instant communication can fulfill biochemical needs within our brains. Research has shown that anticipation and simply "wanting" can stimulate dopamine production in the brain, and an internet full of answers plays right into that. Quoting:
"For humans, this desire to search is not just about fulfilling our physical needs. Panksepp says that humans can get just as excited about abstract rewards as tangible ones. He says that when we get thrilled about the world of ideas, about making intellectual connections, about divining meaning, it is the seeking circuits that are firing. ... The dopamine circuits 'promote states of eagerness and directed purpose,' Panksepp writes. It's a state humans love to be in. So good does it feel that we seek out activities, or substances, that keep this system aroused — cocaine and amphetamines, drugs of stimulation, are particularly effective at stirring it."
First post (Score:3, Funny)
First Post!
Re:First reply (Score:5, Funny)
First reply!
Endorphins looping!
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First mod parent up post !
This IS better than sex.
Re:First reply (Score:4, Insightful)
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Oh god are you trolling me ?
Trolling ?
OH GOD YES YES TROLL MORE !
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IN SOVIET RUSSIA BEOWULF CLUSTERS OF POSTERS TROLL SLASHDOT.
And yes, they run Linux, while BSD is still dying. Netcraft confirms it!
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Btw, I love all three OS's, they're all great for different reasons.
First congrats (Score:2, Insightful)
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First congrats post for using both you're and your correctly in the same sentence
First FTFY post!
Sweet dopamine release (Score:2, Funny)
And I'm spent.
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First reply!
Endorphins looping!
Burma Shave!
I think they're missing the obvious here (Score:2)
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Searching fulfills the dopamine drive in our brains..... Why do I think that Rule 34 applies here?
Whatever man! My inerenet has been DOWN for hours and I need some INFORMATION!!! I need it NOW! Goddamn it! Now, get the fuck out of the way!!
I wish there was some sort of fucking patch I can put on my fucking arm when my interweb is DOWN or Wellbutrin or something man!. Jesus Mother Fucking Christ!
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Damn, you made me to google for rule 34! And that after having read how dangerous seeking is!
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zOMG guys! If this research is right, then that means someone could probably make money by writing a software app that does nothing but entertain people by exploiting this brain response! Like, instead of an app that is an electronic spreadsheet, an app that lets you shoot people in the face and beat up hookers. Even though there's no useful output, I bet people would totally BUY IT!!!
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Well, I can tell you, Google addiction is nothing against Slashdot addiction. Be glad that you are not on Slashdot. Oh, wait, you are!
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Yes.
EVERY FUCKING THING fulfills biochemical needs (Score:3, Interesting)
Each and every thing we do fulfills biochemical needs within our brains.
The dopamine system is great for sending the signals that a prehistoric smartaleck apeman needs up from the lizard brain without needing culture or language or any real reasoning.
Just good vibes to tell us we our meeting our survival minimums.
These impulses work for the hunter-gatherer of the Olduvai or the 21st-century equivalent. And although near universal, the domapine system is a great inkblot for all kinds of projection of bad values and druggie-type bad behviours, when it works the same way for all behaviours good bad and in between.
Porn (Score:2, Funny)
For humans, this desire to search is not just about fulfilling our physical needs.
errr, yes it is?
Minimal Multitasking... (Score:5, Interesting)
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When people reach informational saturation and miss a live conversation I hear them exclaim, "sorry I was multitasking", but it's just an excuse for mismanaged prioities.
Mismanaged priorities? I disagree. Finding an odd fact or surfing something of interest is infinitely more rewarding than listening to someone complain about work or whatever mediocre subject matter they bring up. Talk about something fascinating and you'll get pushed up higher in the priority list. I've got at least 2 conversations I'm ignoring right now to respond because while your post may not be the most fascinating it is more interesting than listening to friends jabber on about how work sucked to
If this were true for everybody... (Score:2, Interesting)
Then why do some people act as if discovering and learning were *painful*? I see clearly the point mentioned in the summary - learning gives me almost a rush. But the people who refuse to read the manual, refuse to use a search engine, and refuse to read the error message on the dialog box on their screen, these people act as if they were wired backwards. I've seen people who would rather endure physical agony than to spend one minute learning with their brain.
This could lead to the most significant discove
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Well, all people enjoy learning. It's just the difference of what they enjoy to learn. Some people enjoy learning about the latest affair of some celebrity, or about what some movie star wears at some event. I prefer learning about new things related to math, physics and computers. Those who would learn all about celebrities usually think math, physics and computers are boring. I consider celebrity stuff boring.
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And I bet you judge those people, too. I bet you think that what THEY want to learn is INFERIOR to what you do.
You are part of the problem. Learn to accept.
I suppose it was pretty predictable (Score:2)
that the comments on this posting would be all meta FTW.
After all, I *am* in New York City.
It doesn't explain... (Score:3, Funny)
Hmmm... Intellectual Connections, Nope, That doesn't explain facebook or twitter... NEXT!
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I get you are addicted to searching for IE-only pages?
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Sssshh (Score:1)
This is about SO much more ... (Score:1)
I need to score some internet... (Score:2)
So true. But I doubt chopping up a search-engine with a credit-card and snorting it through a rolled-up $100 off you girlfriend's ass will tingle your "dopamine circuits" in quite the same way -- although that voice on the old Yahoo! ads always seemed pretty excited.
+4 Insightful oblig xkcd reference (Score:3, Interesting)
outlaw thinking (Score:4, Funny)
Thanks for spoiling it for the rest of us. Now intellectual pursuits such as searching for a cure for cancer will be outlawed.
If people aren't even free to piss away their own money, do you really think we'll be free for much longer to get high on thoughts? Let me guess, thinking leads to harder drugs?
And thus... (Score:1)
Searching... Searching... (Score:1)
The most interesting bit of the article (Score:2)
To me, the most interesting bit in this article was the fact that the famous experiment with the rat and the pleasure lever connected to its brains WASN'T connected to the pleasure/reward center!
Though this "seeking" explanation to the non-orgasmic state of the subjects with that electrode in their brain is... more complicated, so it's not about to replace the old interpretation.
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Media Ecology (Score:1)
Our technologies are not inert and benign. They're not "just there". Using them affects us.
Answer me honestly -- after a couple decades of internet usage, what is your attention span like? When is the last time you read a long, hard, book?
Yes, the Web is useful. But there's a cost.
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Answer me honestly -- after a couple decades of internet usage, what is your attention span like?
Personally? Same as it always was. I can focus on things long-term, but I can get distracted by the pretty lights and colors of a TV set, often during certain long conversations with a member of the opposite sex.
So, uh, typical male attention span, then.
And I am definitely an Internet addict. While my backup plan is always a good book, if I'm off it for long enough I do get a bit twitchy.
When is the last time you read a long, hard, book?
Let's see.... The Ciardi translation of the Divine Comedy. I reached Canto 12 of Purgatorio this morning.
Before tha
why Safari/OS X generates files Downloads-1-1? (Score:1)
Populations in the First World ( Julodimorpha ) (Score:2)
Sometimes I wonder if the populations in developed countries are stable or falling because people in those countries easily find distraction from the biological imperatives that have driven people in the past.
The situation could be very similar to the situation with a certain Austrailian Jewel Beetle [amitywilczek.com], which is in decline because the male of the species prefers discarded brown glass beer bottles to the shiny red female beetles. Could it be that modern life contains distractions equally effective at distrac