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Syndrome Cluster

Attention & Focus

Measured impact of platform-driven interruption, fragmentation, and reward-on-variable-schedule design on sustained attention, working memory, and task-switching cost.

6 studies on file 5 peer-reviewed 1 replicating 0 contradicting / hypothesis-flagged 3 compounding platforms
5

The strongest tier on file for this syndrome cluster: published studies in peer-reviewed venues whose primary outcome bears directly on this domain.

Mobile phone short video use negatively impacts attention functions: an EEG study

2024 Frontiers in Human Neuroscience TikTok
Yan, Tingting; Su, Conghui; Xue, Weichen; Hu, Yuzheng; Zhou, Hui

The pervasive nature of short-form video platforms has seamlessly integrated into daily routines, yet it is important to recognize their potential adverse effects on both physical and mental health. Prior research has identified a detrimental impact of excessive short-form video consumption on attentional behavior, but the underlying neural mechanisms remain unexplored. In the current study, we aimed to investigate the effect of short-form video use on attentional functions, measured through the attention network test (ANT). A total of 48 participants, consisting of 35 females and 13 males, with a mean age of 21.8 years, were recruited. The mobile phone short video addiction tendency questionnaire (MPSVATQ) and self-control scale (SCS) were conducted to assess the short video usage behavior and self-control ability. Electroencephalogram (EEG) data were recorded during the completion of the ANT task. The correlation analysis showed a significant negative relationship between MPSVATQ and theta power index reflecting the executive control in the prefrontal region (r = −0.395, p = 0.007), this result was not observed by using theta power index of the resting-state EEG data. Furthermore, a significant negative correlation was identified between MPSVATQ and SCS outcomes (r = −0.320, p = 0.026). These results suggest that an increased tendency toward mobile phone short video addiction could negatively impact self-control and diminish executive control within the realm of attentional functions. This study sheds light on the adverse consequences stemming from short video consumption and underscores the importance of developing interventions to mitigate short video addiction.

From “online brains” to “online lives”: understanding the individualized impacts of Internet use across psychological, cognitive and social dimensions

2024 World Psychiatry
Firth, Joseph; Torous, John; López‐Gil, José Francisco; Linardon, Jake; Milton, Alyssa; Lambert, Jeffrey; Smith, Lee; Jarić, Ivan; Fabian, Hannah; Vancampfort, Davy; Onyeaka, Henry; Schuch, Felipe B.; Firth, Josh A.

In response to the mass adoption and extensive usage of Internet‐enabled devices across the world, a major review published in this journal in 2019 examined the impact of Internet on human cognition, discussing the concepts and ideas behind the “online brain”. Since then, the online world has become further entwined with the fabric of society, and the extent to which we use such technologies has continued to grow. Furthermore, the research evidence on the ways in which Internet usage affects the human mind has advanced considerably. In this paper, we sought to draw upon the latest data from large‐scale epidemiological studies and systematic reviews, along with randomized controlled trials and qualitative research recently emerging on this topic, in order to now provide a multi‐dimensional overview of the impacts of Internet usage across psychological, cognitive and societal outcomes. Within this, we detail the empirical evidence on how effects differ according to various factors such as age, gender, and usage types. We also draw from new research examining more experiential aspects of individuals’ online lives, to understand how the specifics of their interactions with the Internet, and the impact on their lifestyle, determine the benefits or drawbacks of online time. Additionally, we explore how the nascent but intriguing areas of culturomics, artificial intelligence, virtual reality, and augmented reality are changing our understanding of how the Internet can interact with brain and behavior. Overall, the importance of taking an individualized and multi‐dimensional approach to how the Internet affects mental health, cognition and social functioning is clear. Furthermore, we emphasize the need for guidelines, policies and initiatives around Internet usage to make full use of the evidence available from neuroscientific, behavioral and societal levels of research presented herein.

Exploring the Impact of Internet Use on Memory and Attention Processes

2020 International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Firth, Josh A.; Torous, John; Firth, Joseph

The rapid uptake of the internet has provided a new platform for people to engage with almost all aspects of life. As such, it is currently crucial to investigate the relationship between the internet and cognition across contexts and the underlying neurobiological mechanisms driving this. We describe the current understanding of this relationship across the literature and outline the state of knowledge surrounding the potential neurobiological drivers. Through focusing on two key areas of the nascent but growing literature, first the individual- and population-level implications for attention processes and second the neurobiological drivers underpinning internet usage and memory, we describe the implications of the internet for cognition, assess the potential mechanisms linking brain structure to cognition, and elucidate how these influence behaviour. Finally, we identify areas that now require investigation, including (i) the importance of the variation in individual levels of internet usage, (ii) potential individual behavioural implications and emerging population-level effects, and the (iii) interplay between age and the internet–brain relationships across the stages of development.

The “online brain”: how the Internet may be changing our cognition

2019 World Psychiatry
Firth, Joseph; Torous, John; Stubbs, Brendon; Firth, Josh A.; Steiner, Genevieve Z.; Smith, Lee; Alvarez‐Jimenez, Mario; Gleeson, John; Vancampfort, Davy; Armitage, Christopher J.; Sarris, Jerome

The impact of the Internet across multiple aspects of modern society is clear. However, the influence that it may have on our brain structure and functioning remains a central topic of investigation. Here we draw on recent psychological, psychiatric and neuroimaging findings to examine several key hypotheses on how the Internet may be changing our cognition. Specifically, we explore how unique features of the online world may be influencing: a) attentional capacities, as the constantly evolving stream of online information encourages our divided attention across multiple media sources, at the expense of sustained concentration; b) memory processes, as this vast and ubiquitous source of online information begins to shift the way we retrieve, store, and even value knowledge; and c) social cognition, as the ability for online social settings to resemble and evoke real‐world social processes creates a new interplay between the Internet and our social lives, including our self‐concepts and self‐esteem. Overall, the available evidence indicates that the Internet can produce both acute and sustained alterations in each of these areas of cognition, which may be reflected in changes in the brain. However, an emerging priority for future research is to determine the effects of extensive online media usage on cognitive development in youth, and examine how this may differ from cognitive outcomes and brain impact of uses of Internet in the elderly. We conclude by proposing how Internet research could be integrated into broader research settings to study how this unprecedented new facet of society can affect our cognition and the brain across the life course.

The mere presence of your smartphone reduces available cognitive capacity

2017 Journal of Experimental Psychology: HPP Instagram
Ward AF, Duke K, Gneezy A, Bos MW

Across two laboratory experiments, the mere presence of a smartphone within reach reduced working-memory capacity and fluid-intelligence scores even when the phone was off and face-down.

Replications & corroborations (1)
1

Independent studies that re-tested the primary findings — successful replications strengthen the chain; failures or partial replications weaken it.

0

Lower-tier reports, contradicting findings, and hypothesis-flagged clinical observations. Read with the diagnostic caveats — none of these are settled science.

No studies on file for this tier yet.
3

A reader exposed to these surfaces simultaneously is not exposed to one risk source — they are exposed to all of them at once. Each row links to that platform's full cognitive-impact dossier and to the entity that owns it.

Instagram
Image-first social comparison engine.
Owned by Meta Platforms
1 study
TikTok
Short-form video, algorithmically auto-served.
Owned by ByteDance
1 study
X (formerly Twitter)
High-velocity public discourse platform.
Owned by X Corp
1 study