Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/04/22/email_destroys_iq/

Email destroys the mind faster than marijuana - study
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco
Published Friday 22nd April 2005 09:10 GMT

Modern technology depletes human cognitive abilities more rapidly than
drugs, according to a psychiatric study conducted at King's College,
London. And the curse of 'messaging' is to blame.

Email users suffered a 10 per cent drop in IQ scores, more than twice
the fall recorded by marijuana users, in a clinical trial of over a
thousand participants. Doziness, lethargy and an inability to focus are
classic characteristics of a spliffhead, but email users exhibited these
particular symptoms to a "startling" degree, according to Dr Glenn Wilson.

The deterioration in mental capacity was the direct result of the
trialists' addiction to technology, researchers discovered.

Email addicts were bombarded by context switches and developed an
inability to distinguish between trivial and significant messages.
Incredibly, 20 per cent of trialists jeopardized their immediate social
relations by rushing off to "check their messages" in the middle of a
conversation.

Wilson's research is no flash in the pan. Computer technology in its
modern, "interconnected" form is dumbing down the population more
rapidly than television.

A study of 100,000 school children in over 30 countries around the world
testified that non-computer using kids performed better in literacy and
numeracy schools than PC-using children. Education experts have dubbed
it the "problem solving deficit disorder".

Awash with facts, we've forgotten how to think
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/03/21/how_dumb_kids/).

King's College's pioneering study focussed solely on messaging - but
there are many other emerging technologies that could be dumbing down
technologies too, and their consequences haven't been fully explored.


World peace - through a computer [The Guardian]
(There should be a link under this 'banner ad', but there isn't. [heh
heh//leigh]


We look forward to studies that examine the IQ lossage involved in the
many other unavoidable parts of everyday life. Chores such as editing
the Windows Registry (-2) , writing a weblog (-15), or reading the Ask
Jack column in The Guardian (-175).

Related link
Emails 'pose threat to IQ'
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1465973,00.html)

Related stories
How computers make kids dumb
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/03/21/how_dumb_kids/)

RIAA attacking our culture, the American Mind
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/05/04/riaa_attacking_our_culture/)


Leigh
http://leighm.net/

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