Whether sitting on a train or having dinner
at a restaurant, many people find it hard to stop fiddling with their mobile
phones – firing off a never-ending stream of Facebook, Instagram and Twitter
posts.
If this online hyperactivity looks
exhausting, it’s no surprise to discover that these high-frequency internet
users find it much more difficult to pay attention to what’s going on around
them than the rest of us – even when they are not consumed by the web.
New research finds that the most frequent
mobile phone and internet users are the most likely to be distracted, for
example by being prone to missing important appointments and daydreaming while
having a conversation.
In the first study of its kind, an academic
from Leicester’s De Montfort University has found that the more times a person
uses the internet or their mobile phone, the more likely they are to experience
“cognitive failures”.
These include a whole range of blunders, and
a general lack of awareness of a person’s surroundings that stretches as far as
people forgetting why they have just gone from one part of the house to the
other says Dr Lee Hadlington, author of the research.
The study draws the same conclusions among
users of mobile phones without internet access as with it – suggesting that
mobile phone conversations and surfing the web are similarly associated with
distraction.
But whether the most digitally active people
are more distracted because their excessive online activity makes them jittery
or hyperactive, or whether it is the other way around – that they are more
drawn to these activities because they naturally have short “attentional
control” – is unclear at this stage, he says.
Dr Hadlington does have a theory, however:
that it is a mix of the two. In other words, those people already suffering
from short attention spans are drawn to the distractions of modern technology,
which makes it even harder for them to pay attention to their surroundings.
His research has been published in the
journal Computers in Human
Behaviour. He is now working on research to answer this question
more comprehensively and to look for ways to solve the problem.
“This is a very underexamined area and a very
important one. We are using technology on a daily basis but we don’t understand
its effect on us,” Dr Hadlington said.
“We don’t know what’s actually happening to
our cognition when we are using this technology and that’s the important thing.
What we do know from this research is that there are some statistically significant
numbers of people who say they use the internet or their phone a lot and who
experience cognitive failures,” he added.
The study asked people a series of questions
to determine whether they experienced certain types of “blunders” – defined as
factors relating to their ability to focus, physical blunders such as bumping
into things, and memory.
The study was conducted among 107 men and 103
women between the ages of 18 and 65, who spent an average of 22.95 hours a week
online.
Source | http://www.independent.co.uk/
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