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kyleamazza | 3 years ago
Anecdotally speaking, the rapid context switching has a massive effect over time on a person's ability to concentrate. It's a lot harder to focus on anything without the physical and mental urge to fiddle with something and scroll through short videos.
I haven't looked into whether or not there's significant literature on this though; definitely would be curious if this is indeed a worsening trend
taurath|3 years ago
Let them have a thing that makes their day a little brighter, or if you’re in an older generation encourage your peers to get out of the way so they can fix the damn problems.
The worsening trend is what it takes to survive, let alone thrive in the US, and tiktok is something that people would pay less attention to if there were more agency to have better lives and not just slave it away for some holding company’s shareholders.
kelnos|3 years ago
kleene_op|3 years ago
The problem with collective suicide is that it impacts more than just the ones doing it.
tennis_sort|3 years ago
As the book hypothesizes, poor Dopamine regulation and the increasingly prescribed medication to treat this are becoming the norm. Particularly among working classes who have poorer earning potential and engaging work.
Tiktok is literally mind numbing.
klabb3|3 years ago
All of the above is not just false today, but we have even more passive entertainment. TikTok has been promoted precisely because the only feature is zapping, for the vast majority of users.
treme|3 years ago