00:00:01
this video is brought to you by ground
00:00:03
news hi welcome to another episode of
00:00:06
Cold
00:00:07
Fusion we know for a fact that what all
00:00:10
of these systems do every single one is
00:00:13
it exploits our own natural tendencies
00:00:15
in human beings to get and want feedback
00:00:19
and that feedback chemically speaking is
00:00:22
the release of dopamine in your brain
00:00:24
and so what these feedback loops do and
00:00:26
they exist everywhere in Call of Duty in
00:00:28
other video games in social networking
00:00:30
sites they get you to react and I think
00:00:33
that if you get too
00:00:36
desensitized and you need it over and
00:00:39
over and over again then you become
00:00:41
actually detached from the world in
00:00:43
which you live you become callous you
00:00:44
become crude and you live in front of
00:00:46
your screen so we all know the benefits
00:00:48
and usefulness of smartphones they're
00:00:50
amazing a little rectangle in your
00:00:52
pocket that does everything but that
00:00:54
comes with the price there's a growing
00:00:56
body of research that indicates that
00:00:58
smartphones can actually change the the
00:01:00
way our brains work did you know that
00:01:02
just the mere presence of your phone in
00:01:04
a room can destroy your cognitive
00:01:05
functioning even if it's switched off
00:01:08
crazy I know but literal experiments
00:01:10
have proved this in this episode we'll
00:01:12
take a look at how phones affect our
00:01:14
memory stress levels and cognitive
00:01:16
function and also here's a question if
00:01:19
the collective brains of billions of
00:01:21
people on earth have been unknowingly
00:01:23
altered worldwide what does this mean
00:01:25
for society it's not all bad news though
00:01:28
we'll also take a look at how we can
00:01:29
help
00:01:31
ourselves you are watching cold fusion
00:01:35
[Music]
00:01:43
TV in 2007 amst the chaos of the
00:01:46
financial crisis the first iPhone was
00:01:48
launched and we are calling
00:01:51
it
00:01:54
iPhone computer giant Apple says it's
00:01:57
reinvented the phone marrying a mobile
00:02:00
with an iPod giving birth to the iPhone
00:02:03
an iPod a cell phone and a portable
00:02:05
internet all in a little lightweight
00:02:07
package the big attraction here right
00:02:09
now is encased in that plastic tube back
00:02:12
there surrounded by an admiring crowd
00:02:14
it's a Sleek Aluminum and Stainless
00:02:16
Steel creation a cell phone doesn't have
00:02:19
any buttons just a touchcreen it only
00:02:22
had 16 apps and that was it no app store
00:02:26
and nothing else it was relatively
00:02:28
simple by today's standards suddenly
00:02:30
buttons were replaced with a large
00:02:32
responsive touchscreen interface people
00:02:34
could Now swipe tap scroll zoom and
00:02:38
browse the web more efficiently than
00:02:40
they could on a desktop at the time such
00:02:43
features were unheard of although it
00:02:45
looked interesting very few predicted
00:02:47
just how quickly such a small device
00:02:49
could envelop our lives with each
00:02:51
passing year the phones got faster the
00:02:54
features grew and the software
00:02:56
exponentially improved apps became
00:02:58
useful but then came the algorithms and
00:03:01
feeds and before we knew it most of us
00:03:04
had entered a 2d virtual reality a
00:03:06
completely separate reality and view of
00:03:08
the world but through a screen this was
00:03:11
powered by algorithms designed to keep
00:03:13
your attention and apps designed to
00:03:15
trigger the dopamine responses in your
00:03:16
brain it sounds like a sci-fi film when
00:03:19
put that way but we all know this story
00:03:21
by now it was one of the main themes of
00:03:23
the Netflix show the social dilemma a
00:03:25
hmark look into how algorithms rule our
00:03:27
lives and the people that made those
00:03:29
algorithms knew what they were
00:03:36
doing in 2008 when the true impact of
00:03:39
smartphones was still a mystery UCLA
00:03:42
psychiatrist Gary Small began sounding
00:03:44
the caution alarm he was saying that
00:03:46
heavy smartphone use could alter brain
00:03:48
function by weakening the circuits
00:03:50
needed for inperson interaction and
00:03:51
reading non-verbal cues remember the
00:03:54
iPhone was only 1 year old at this time
00:03:57
at the time his claims were called quote
00:03:59
Ing and quote provocative by the science
00:04:02
Community but it still couldn't be
00:04:04
proved fast forward a decade and a half
00:04:06
later and smartphones and their
00:04:08
cognitive effects are being reexamined
00:04:11
but what about the less known stuff what
00:04:12
other effects do smartphones have on the
00:04:15
Mind although there's still much to
00:04:17
learn about the long-term cognitive
00:04:18
impact there is some scientific evidence
00:04:21
that should make us pause if you've ever
00:04:22
felt that Phantom Buzz or feel anxious
00:04:25
when you haven't checked your phone in a
00:04:26
while you don't need an expert to tell
00:04:28
you that there's something strange at
00:04:32
play what exactly are smartphones doing
00:04:35
to our minds and personalities let's
00:04:37
take a look at the research we're going
00:04:39
to cover memory addiction cognitive
00:04:41
function and stress let's break them
00:04:44
down number one memory back in the day
00:04:48
you had to memorize all your friends
00:04:50
numbers or actually listen in Math's
00:04:52
class because your teachers said that
00:04:53
you couldn't carry a calculator 24/7 cab
00:04:56
drivers also back in the day had no GPS
00:04:59
they had to know where they were going
00:05:00
without stopping to check they had to
00:05:02
know all the streets it turns out that
00:05:05
exercising that mental muscle of memory
00:05:07
has given cab drivers physically larger
00:05:09
hippo campire it's the memory center of
00:05:11
the brain but also AIDS in learning and
00:05:13
emotional processing but now today we
00:05:16
heavily rely on our devices as memory
00:05:18
aids but new research suggests that
00:05:21
maybe this isn't a great sign at 2021
00:05:24
study found that excessive smartphone
00:05:26
use can reduce the size of the
00:05:27
hippocampus especially in young develop
00:05:29
brains there's been other studies with
00:05:31
similar findings but unfortunately
00:05:34
there's even more a meta study of MRI
00:05:36
scans of chronic smartphone users found
00:05:38
that they have lower gray matter volumes
00:05:40
in specific regions of the brain this
00:05:42
includes the anterior singulate cortex
00:05:45
orbitofrontal cortex fusiform gyrus and
00:05:48
parahippocampal regions while the
00:05:51
research is still in its early stages
00:05:53
less gray matter usually means a higher
00:05:55
risk of depression schizophrenia and
00:05:57
dementia but remember these are chronic
00:05:59
smartphone uses but on that note the
00:06:02
cost of this might be an enormous
00:06:04
increase in dementia quote the less you
00:06:07
use that mind of yours the less you use
00:06:09
the systems that are responsible for
00:06:11
complicated things like episodic
00:06:12
memories or cognitive flexibility the
00:06:15
more likely it is to develop Dimension
00:06:17
once you stop using your memory it will
00:06:19
get worse which will make you use your
00:06:21
devices more according to Professor
00:06:23
Oliver harded even an overreliance on
00:06:25
GPS's could reduce the density of gray
00:06:28
matter in the brain
00:06:30
to combat the effects of hippocampus
00:06:31
shrinkage regular exercise has shown to
00:06:34
increase gray matter and increase memory
00:06:36
it's also good to try and remember
00:06:38
directions where possible and generally
00:06:40
try to use your memory instead of your
00:06:42
phone where practical and if you still
00:06:44
really just can't put your phone down
00:06:46
apps like hippo camera can help hippoc
00:06:48
camera is a really easyto ous smartphone
00:06:50
application that mimics how the brain
00:06:53
supports memory specific behaviors also
00:06:56
don't do our brains any favors one of
00:06:58
these is attemp to to multitask
00:07:00
interestingly humans multitasking is a
00:07:03
myth only 2.5% of us can do it
00:07:05
effectively Katherine price writes about
00:07:07
this in her book how to break up with
00:07:09
your phone in particular she warns about
00:07:11
the dangers of continual partial
00:07:13
attention it's checking your phone while
00:07:15
mid conversation or scrolling on social
00:07:17
media while watching TV sound familiar
00:07:20
while we do this to attempt to be more
00:07:22
productive it harms our cognitive Health
00:07:24
in fact trying to consistently multitask
00:07:27
can actually hinder your ability to
00:07:28
think deep and complex thoughts it also
00:07:31
can create a false sense of urgency
00:07:33
which prevents our brain's ability to
00:07:35
transfer information into long-term
00:07:37
storage and from here it becomes harder
00:07:40
to accumulate memories in summary every
00:07:43
minute distracted by your phone is a
00:07:45
lost minute in the here and now this can
00:07:47
leave behind a trail of Forgotten
00:07:49
experiences and damage the ability to
00:07:51
formulate deep and complex thoughts and
00:07:53
long-term
00:07:55
memories moving on to number two
00:07:57
addiction now this de detrimental effect
00:08:00
is more commonly known but did you know
00:08:02
that nomophobia is the real fear of
00:08:04
being away from one's phone for heavy
00:08:07
users a study by Dr Larry rosson the
00:08:09
author of The distracted mind revealed
00:08:12
what a lack of smartphone access can do
00:08:14
participants in the experiment were
00:08:16
strapped to sweat and heat monitors as
00:08:18
they read a passage their phones were
00:08:19
Out Of Reach but they could hear text
00:08:21
notifications flooding in the result was
00:08:24
a spike in anxiety and a drop in reading
00:08:26
comprehension and this will affect more
00:08:28
people as we all using our smartphones
00:08:30
more between 2019 and 2023 average
00:08:34
Mobile screen time shot up by 23% from 2
00:08:37
hours and 56 minutes to 3 hours and 46
00:08:40
minutes the average user now checks
00:08:43
their phones 96 times per
00:08:45
day research from a peer-reviewed
00:08:48
medical journal Psychiatry research
00:08:50
neuroimaging confirms that excessive
00:08:52
smartphone use presents itself a lot
00:08:54
like addiction weakening vital brain
00:08:56
networks that control things like paying
00:08:58
attention and stopping inul fores this
00:09:00
leads to withdrawal symptoms and
00:09:01
continued use despite negative
00:09:03
consequences there's a silent epidemic
00:09:06
that we're neglecting one can imagine
00:09:07
the impact albe it to varying degrees on
00:09:10
the 6.84 billion smartphone users
00:09:13
worldwide when you factor in the amount
00:09:15
of developing brains that are using the
00:09:16
devices what will be the end
00:09:19
result as smartphone use increases each
00:09:22
year even the smartphones creators are
00:09:24
questioning the monster that they've
00:09:26
Unleashed Tony Fidel who worked on the
00:09:29
original iPhone team says quote I wake
00:09:32
up in cold sweats every so often
00:09:34
thinking what did we bring to the world
00:09:36
did we really bring a nuclear bomb with
00:09:38
information that can like we see with
00:09:40
fake news blow up people's brains and
00:09:42
reprogram them end quote as a side I've
00:09:45
done a full episode on the story of the
00:09:47
people who created the iPhone if you're
00:09:49
interested but zooming out we can't
00:09:51
blame the phone manufacturers if you've
00:09:53
watched The Social dilemma you would
00:09:54
have seen former Tech employees
00:09:56
expressing a sense of regret regarding
00:09:58
the designs of social media apps we are
00:10:01
increasingly glued to our phones just
00:10:03
look at this 30 seconds we filmed
00:10:05
outside Oxford Circus earlier today all
00:10:07
the white flashes are the phones people
00:10:09
are on so we've left them in that room
00:10:12
we've said we've left a camera on record
00:10:14
to film them getting on and now we're
00:10:17
just going to leave them there and see
00:10:19
how many times they look at their phone
00:10:21
Harry you got your phone out after 3
00:10:23
minutes is that a surprise to you it is
00:10:25
it is a surprise to me actually cuz I I
00:10:27
didn't think I used technology that that
00:10:29
often I didn't think I was that
00:10:30
dependent on it I'm surprised I lost it
00:10:32
4
00:10:33
minutes the role of addictive design in
00:10:35
social media has been well documented
00:10:38
Casino like features like pull to
00:10:40
refresh mimic slot machines and exploit
00:10:42
the pleasure of anticipating rewards and
00:10:45
interestingly this can trigger larger
00:10:46
dopamine spikes than the rewards
00:10:48
themselves there's also infinite
00:10:50
scrolling and autoplay to lull user into
00:10:53
Mindless Behavior but a silver lining is
00:10:55
that since 2018 Apple and Google have
00:10:58
built digital wellbeing features into
00:10:59
their phones to prevent overuse so the
00:11:02
tools are there people just have to use
00:11:04
them number three cognitive function a
00:11:08
2022 study found that our reading
00:11:10
comprehension declines when we read from
00:11:12
a screen even if the text is exactly the
00:11:14
same as it is on paper the chart you see
00:11:17
now shows reading comprehension scores
00:11:19
the red is reading from paper while the
00:11:21
blue is reading from a phone in addition
00:11:24
as mentioned at the top of this episode
00:11:26
The mere presence of your smartphone in
00:11:28
the same room room lowers your ability
00:11:30
to focus remember and solve problems the
00:11:34
phone doesn't even have to be switched
00:11:35
on researchers at the University of
00:11:37
Chicago call this brain drain it happens
00:11:40
because the human brain has a limited
00:11:42
capacity to process information meaning
00:11:45
we have to prioritize what we want to
00:11:46
focus on when your phone is nearby it
00:11:49
competes for cognitive resources and
00:11:51
your brain must work extra hard to
00:11:53
resist its Temptation This sabotages
00:11:55
your concentration on other tasks so
00:11:57
let's look at the experiment it's
00:11:59
remarkable quote the researchers asked
00:12:02
participants to either put their phones
00:12:04
next to them so they were visible like
00:12:05
on a desk nearby and out of sight like
00:12:08
in a bag or pocket or in another room
00:12:11
participants then completed a series of
00:12:13
tasks to test their abilities to process
00:12:15
and remember information their problem
00:12:16
solving and their focus they were found
00:12:19
to perform far better when their phones
00:12:21
were in another room instead of nearby
00:12:23
whether visible powered on or not that
00:12:26
held true even though most of the
00:12:27
participants claimed not to be
00:12:29
consciously thinking about their devices
00:12:31
end quote so it's an effect that happens
00:12:33
even though we don't notice it quite
00:12:36
fascinating and finally number four
00:12:40
stress smartphones aren't just changing
00:12:42
our Behavior they're affecting human
00:12:44
biology and the health risks can get
00:12:46
pretty serious endocrinologist Robert
00:12:48
lustig warns that smartphone
00:12:50
notifications have turned us all into
00:12:52
Pavlov's dogs training our brains to be
00:12:54
in a constant state of fear and stress
00:12:57
here's how it happens one
00:12:59
neurons in the prefrontal cortex are
00:13:01
altered after exposure to a flood of
00:13:04
neurotransmitters one common trigger of
00:13:06
neurotransmitters to flood the brain is
00:13:08
the anticipation of rewards like the UI
00:13:10
on Instagram two this can cause our
00:13:13
prefrontal cortex the brain's
00:13:15
decision-making Hub and emotional
00:13:16
control center to go completely haywire
00:13:19
and even shut down and three when the
00:13:21
prefrontal cortex shuts down the amydala
00:13:24
responsible for emotional regulation
00:13:26
takes over inducing stress and panic
00:13:29
when our prefrontal cortex is overworked
00:13:31
in this state one's self-control can
00:13:33
take a hit then to add to the pile
00:13:35
there's the information that we receive
00:13:37
from social media from Doom scrolling to
00:13:40
the creation of young hypochondriacs on
00:13:42
Tik Tok self diagnosing themselves into
00:13:44
Oblivion the answer is yes you have
00:13:46
trauma procrastination is actually a
00:13:48
short-term coping tool to avoid feeling
00:13:51
anxiety or dread a popular type of video
00:13:54
on Tik Tok is five things you might not
00:13:56
realize were a mental disorder and it's
00:13:58
really gen generic things like biting
00:14:00
your nails or fidgeting or being a
00:14:02
people pleaser I just need to take an
00:14:04
anxiety nap can you wake me up in like
00:14:05
30 minutes I'm like not well in a lot of
00:14:07
this discussion the problem isn't with
00:14:09
the smartphones themselves but social
00:14:11
media use and this was solidified by a
00:14:14
2023 Global study of over 50,000
00:14:17
participants but we have to stay
00:14:18
level-headed there's research to suggest
00:14:21
that about 30 minutes of daily social
00:14:23
media is actually beneficial but going
00:14:25
past about an hour can be detrimental
00:14:28
one of the most most impactful outcomes
00:14:30
of smartphones has been the way we
00:14:31
consume daily news for example when open
00:14:34
AI released GPT 4 last week it might
00:14:37
surprise you how different media covered
00:14:38
the story in different ways take for
00:14:40
example this story on the recent open AI
00:14:43
Reddit content deal the story was
00:14:45
reported on by 55 news outlets this left
00:14:48
leaning headline from Business Insider
00:14:50
frames the story as one regarding Big
00:14:51
Data concerns a right-leaning Outlet
00:14:54
focuses on the political orientation of
00:14:56
Reddit users as well as the monetary
00:14:58
size of the deal so when someone's
00:14:59
scrolling through a news feed that's
00:15:01
tailor made for them with news articles
00:15:03
that confirm their bias they're unlikely
00:15:05
to see the other side of the story
00:15:06
outside of their bubble and this is what
00:15:08
the algorithms of today have created so
00:15:10
it's important to get the whole picture
00:15:12
and that's where today's sponsor ground
00:15:14
news comes in ground news is a website
00:15:16
and app developed by a former NASA
00:15:18
engineer who was on a mission to give
00:15:20
readers an easy datadriven objective way
00:15:23
to read the news every story comes with
00:15:25
a quick visual breakdown of political
00:15:27
bias factuality and the ownership of the
00:15:30
sources reporting all backed by ratings
00:15:32
from three Independent News monitoring
00:15:34
organizations for example let's go back
00:15:36
to that story on the open AI Reddit deal
00:15:38
on ground news everything is organized
00:15:41
to make it easy for you to see all the
00:15:42
details their biased distribution shows
00:15:45
you the political bias of the reporting
00:15:46
Outlets below you can see the factuality
00:15:49
information as well as the ownership
00:15:51
information for this story 31% of
00:15:54
reporting Outlets are owned by media
00:15:56
conglomerate I especially like the blink
00:15:58
feed which highlights stories that are
00:16:00
heavily covered by one side of the
00:16:02
political Spectrum it's important to
00:16:04
utilize critical thinking and break out
00:16:06
of online Echo Chambers if we know where
00:16:08
these views are coming from we're
00:16:09
probably going to be better equipped to
00:16:11
engage in constructive dialogue to those
00:16:13
who hold different views ground news is
00:16:15
a fantastic tool for sifting through the
00:16:17
daily misinformation and bias they
00:16:19
provide all the tools you need to be a
00:16:21
critical thinker today I'm offering 40%
00:16:24
off their Vantage subscription and this
00:16:26
provides unlimited access of all their
00:16:28
amazing features
00:16:29
so subscribe today by going to ground.
00:16:31
news/ coldfusion or click the link in
00:16:34
the video description to get started
00:16:36
thank you now back to the video so what
00:16:38
happens when people break away from
00:16:40
smartphones completely well fortunately
00:16:42
we have a slew of examples from those
00:16:44
who are heavy smartphone users and
00:16:46
decided to ditch them for a dumb phone
00:16:48
the way they describe their experiences
00:16:49
is pretty interesting let's take a quick
00:16:51
look at some testimonials I was not
00:16:54
ready for how much I truly enjoyed this
00:16:58
phone I was present with my kids with my
00:17:02
wife I was able to be reached by friends
00:17:04
and family bit about my experience just
00:17:06
what is it like living without a
00:17:07
smartphone for those of us who grew up
00:17:09
in the '90s I think there's a lot of
00:17:11
nostalgia around that time and for me a
00:17:13
lot of that is about the fact that
00:17:15
nobody had a smartphone or even a cell
00:17:17
phone but I was surprised and excited to
00:17:20
find that I could kind of reconnect with
00:17:21
some of the benefits of that time
00:17:23
through this experiment I've been much
00:17:25
more focused at work because all of my
00:17:28
work now takes place in front of the
00:17:30
computer so I'm much more intentional
00:17:32
and focused when it is actually time to
00:17:34
work I have time for Creative Hobbies
00:17:36
because I'm not scrolling through social
00:17:38
media or news or anything on my phone my
00:17:40
phone doesn't do anything fun and that
00:17:42
means I have time to get bored have you
00:17:44
ever been bored as an adult I don't
00:17:46
think I had until this experiment but
00:17:49
boredom equals creativity but then there
00:17:52
were others and this group wasn't quite
00:17:54
ass sold on the dumb phone idea and
00:17:56
quickly found themselves reverting back
00:17:57
to a smartphone all right so I'm nearly
00:17:59
finished with this 30-day experiment and
00:18:01
if I'm being completely honest I cannot
00:18:04
wait to get back to a smartphone I
00:18:06
entered this experiment really wanting
00:18:08
it to work really wanting to find a
00:18:10
phone that would give me all the tools I
00:18:12
needed while removing the headaches my
00:18:13
smartphone causes but unfortunately I
00:18:15
don't know if I'm ready to make the
00:18:17
switch full time not having a camera the
00:18:19
spotty directions and the clunky typing
00:18:21
are the biggest deal breakers for me
00:18:23
this is the phone that you could
00:18:24
literally only call with which is great
00:18:27
if that's all I needed
00:18:29
but I'd have to be damn confident with
00:18:32
my job security and my friendships
00:18:33
because I could see how easily I could
00:18:36
lose connections and friendships due to
00:18:38
my inability to respond there are more
00:18:40
people giving dumb phones a try so much
00:18:43
so that some call it the anti smartphone
00:18:45
Revolution you can check out my podcast
00:18:47
episode with KY Tang the co-founder of
00:18:50
lightone and I discussed this topic in
00:18:52
depth with him so if you've gotten to
00:18:54
this part of the episode you're probably
00:18:56
in one of three camps one all of this
00:18:58
information is new to you or the second
00:19:00
Camp you've heard some of this before
00:19:02
and learned some new things or even if
00:19:05
you're one of those who have heard all
00:19:06
of this before I think it's important to
00:19:08
remind ourselves but what about the
00:19:10
bigger picture what does all of this
00:19:11
mean it's insane to think that there's
00:19:13
the possibility that hundreds of
00:19:15
millions or even billions of people out
00:19:17
there could have worse memory worse
00:19:19
concentration smaller gray matter and
00:19:21
increased anxiety due to Chronic
00:19:23
smartphone overuse I'm going to ask you
00:19:25
do you think this explains part of the
00:19:27
world we live in today although it all
00:19:29
sounds terrible fortunately there are
00:19:31
very practical things that can be done
00:19:33
as we've talked about number one
00:19:35
exercise two avoid the overuse of social
00:19:38
media three stop multitasking four if
00:19:41
you want to increase comprehension
00:19:43
choose to read physical media instead of
00:19:45
your phone and five if you want to
00:19:47
improve memory limit phone use for
00:19:49
memory tasks where possible at the end
00:19:51
of the day the power is still in our
00:19:54
hands so what's your opinion on all of
00:19:56
this did this speak to you do you think
00:19:58
he use your smartphone too much or do
00:20:00
you think you've got everything under
00:20:01
control I'd love to hear from you in the
00:20:03
comments so anyway that is how your
00:20:05
smartphone is rewiring your brain thanks
00:20:08
for watching hope you learned something
00:20:10
from it if this is your first time
00:20:11
watching feel free to subscribe there's
00:20:14
plenty of interesting stuff on science
00:20:15
technology and business my name is toogo
00:20:18
and youve been watching cold fusion and
00:20:19
I'll catch you again soon for the next
00:20:21
episode cheers guys have a good one
00:20:29
I feel I'm getting older
00:20:32
older the B older
00:20:36
older I feel I'm getting older
00:20:42
older
00:20:43
look feel I'm getting old
00:20:49
[Music]