Posts Tagged internet

Do we not read as much anymore because the Internet has sapped our attention spans?

Could part of the reason for the decline in reading be a declining attention span brought on by overstimulation with information? Some recent editorials and articles suggest it might be a possibility.

Ars Technica’s Nate Anderson chronicles an exchange between New Yorker writer George Packer and New York Times “Bits” blogger Nick Bilton. Packer is concerned that the constant bombardment of information from e-mail, webpages, blogs, Twitter, Facebook, et al are eroding the attention span and leaving people unable to concentrate. He writes:

Twitter is crack for media addicts. It scares me, not because I’m morally superior to it, but because I don’t think I could handle it. I’m afraid I’d end up letting my son go hungry.

Bilton responds, chiding Packer for knocking Twitter without trying it, and writes about all the beneficial uses Twitter has in business, journalism, protests, and other activity.

Packer, however, is not convinced.

The Shortening Attention Span

Through Packer’s posts and the Ars piece, the writers reflect on how hard it is to find the time and attention to read books anymore. So does Nicholas Carr, the writer of a piece in The Atlantic that Ars’s Anderson links:

I’m not thinking the way I used to think. I can feel it most strongly when I’m reading. Immersing myself in a book or a lengthy article used to be easy. My mind would get caught up in the narrative or the turns of the argument, and I’d spend hours strolling through long stretches of prose. That’s rarely the case anymore. Now my concentration often starts to drift after two or three pages. I get fidgety, lose the thread, begin looking for something else to do. I feel as if I’m always dragging my wayward brain back to the text. The deep reading that used to come naturally has become a struggle.

Why is this the case? This piece in Slate offers a clue. In our constant information searching and bombardment, Emily Yoffe writes,

We actually resemble nothing so much as those legendary lab rats that endlessly pressed a lever to give themselves a little electrical jolt to the brain. While we tap, tap away at our search engines, it appears we are stimulating the same system in our brains that scientists accidentally discovered more than 50 years ago when probing rat skulls.

Almost everybody has heard about this experiment in high school or college psychology class. Remember the rats that would press a lever repeatedly to the exclusion of all else to stimulate the “reward center” of their brain?

Though it might be better called the “seeking center,” this is the same part of the brain that is stimulated by constant bombardment of information. It has to do with the neurotransmitter dopamine, which is produced by this activity (and also by things like cocaine and amphetamines).

“It’s Like Rickrolling, But You’re Trapped All Day”

image It’s the same drive that causes people to spend hours on search engines, Wikipedia, or TVTropes, going from one link to another. The same drive that powers shopping, and the reason we get carried away by games offering rewards at irregular intervals—be they slot machines or World of Warcraft. The anticipation, the seeking, is better than the actual finding. And Slate adds:

Actually all our electronic communication devices—e-mail, Facebook feeds, texts, Twitter—are feeding the same drive as our searches. Since we’re restless, easily bored creatures, our gadgets give us in abundance qualities the seeking/wanting system finds particularly exciting. Novelty is one. Panksepp says the dopamine system is activated by finding something unexpected or by the anticipation of something new. If the rewards come unpredictably—as e-mail, texts, updates do—we get even more carried away. No wonder we call it a "CrackBerry."

Like an addict with his fixes, this constant stream of stimulation leads to a need for more of it, more often. Carr writes in the Atlantic piece linked above:

As the media theorist Marshall McLuhan pointed out in the 1960s, media are not just passive channels of information. They supply the stuff of thought, but they also shape the process of thought. And what the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation. My mind now expects to take in information the way the Net distributes it: in a swiftly moving stream of particles. Once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski.

Carr goes on to cover studies that suggest people’s reading habits on-line are changing, and to talk about the effect changing to a typewriter had on Nietzche’s writing style. He writes that the Internet has an effect on other media which sounds almost like a description of the behavior of Star Trek’s Borg:

When the Net absorbs a medium, that medium is re-created in the Net’s image. It injects the medium’s content with hyperlinks, blinking ads, and other digital gewgaws, and it surrounds the content with the content of all the other media it has absorbed. A new e-mail message, for instance, may announce its arrival as we’re glancing over the latest headlines at a newspaper’s site. The result is to scatter our attention and diffuse our concentration.

My Own Attention…Wait, What Was I Doing?

From my own personal experience, I am finding something very similar happens. Sometimes I find it hard to “unplug” and direct my attention in only one direction. And sometimes it’s hard to get up the impetus to sit down and write something long-form, because I don’t want to put my attention in any one place for that long.

Even when watching movies or new episodes of my favorite TV shows, I sometimes have to pause and pull up a web browser to check my mail, or pop onto a chatserver to exchange words with friends. When I was watching Avatar for the second time with my parents, during the “boring parts” I would slip out to the aisle where I was blocked from view of the rest of the audience and check my email and Twitter from my cell phone.

I still enjoy reading, and still have the ability to read books in one go—especially if they are sequels to something I have read before, and/or if they’re on my iPhone rather than print—but that could be a factor of how much books and reading shaped my life growing up. For someone without as strong a connection, it’s easy to see how the ability to read long form works could be imperiled.

Can anything be done to make it easier for people to lose themselves in books without constantly worrying about checking their Twitter or e-mail? This is something that the publishing industry should consider very seriously, especially as they raise the price of the form of books best suited to our modern short attention span.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The power of the written word

written-word-art-journal I’m feeling philosophical this afternoon, and wanted to discourse on the amazing power of the written word.

The written word is one of the most powerful communication tools ever invented.

We can absorb written words faster than we can absorb spoken words. We can transmit words from place to place much more efficiently than the spoken word or pictures. (A picture may be worth a thousand words, but it can be the size of tens or hundreds of thousands of them.)

These words, once written, stay around for as long as the medium they’re written on (which is a point of contention between paper books and e-books). They represent crystallized knowledge or imagination, and a single copy can influence the thinking of many, many people.

Have you ever thought about how miraculous it is that we (or at least those of us fortunate enough to have learned to touch-type) can rapidly produce millions of words and send them out all over the world just by wiggling our fingers in ways that were trained into us until they are as unconscious as walking or breathing?

Since the Internet was first invented for exchanging e-mail, you could say that the written word was the Internet’s first “killer app”. Ever since then, the amount of text e-mail, netnews, relay chat, gopher, veronica, wais, ftp, and web traffic has dwarfed in quantity, if not in bandwidth, the johnny-come-lately audio and video transfers.

The written word allows us to engage in a kind of dialogue with the books we read. Books are a one-to-one-at-a-time communication medium, with the words flowing from the author to us. We then turn around and review or discuss them with our friends, a one-to-several medium.

The Internet makes everything faster, of course. E-books bring the books to us faster and more conveniently than printed books–and we discuss them on the net, a one-to-many communication from us to the public in general. And it is possible one member of those public might be the author.

So why is it that the number of people reading for recreation is apparently declining? Are people just bored with books, or mesmerized by fancy computer games? Do they prefer to spend the extra time to get their news through audiovisual means?

It’s a good question—as is the question of whether e-book devices can bring them back into the fold. If the gee-whiz factor of e-book devices and apps gets people reading again, that will be great.

But what if it doesn’t? Is the written word going to go the way of cuneiform?

It is doubtful that the written word will ever die out, even if books go by the wayside. (After all, it didn’t die when we stopped using scrolls.) Video games and gizmos will always need instruction books, and the written word is simply the most efficient way of communicating many concepts (despite what some dystopian SF writers have imagined).

Its delivery may take on forms we can barely even imagine now, however.

(Image borrowed from “Things Locked in Drawers…”)

Tags: , , , , , , , ,