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Is doom scrolling rotting our brains?

7 points| ceronman | 1 year ago |theguardian.com

2 comments

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jfengel|1 year ago

Other way around. A lot of things are rotting our brains, and doom scrolling is one of the results. There's a positive feedback loop, probably, but we were rotting our brains long before doomscrolling.

Neil Postman's 1985 book "Amusing Ourselves To Death" describes a similar phenomenon with TV and radio. And that was before cable news brought us "doom-viewing" with the first Iraq War and 9/11, where people felt compelled to tune in continuously for updates. Even between crises, people watch news for enjoyment, usually to be told about all the terrible things happening.

blackeyeblitzar|1 year ago

In my opinion, yes. I think it desensitizes us to new information, content, and experiences. Humans didn’t evolve side by side with the current way of life. However I don’t know how these researchers could prove it. You can’t feasibly conduct a decades long A/B test of people who use and don’t use smartphones or social media, right? At best you could rely on self reported habits maybe? But that doesn’t seem like enough.