02-16-2024, 05:19 PM
Jtrc Stories of migrants, in images
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Claire Handscombe has a problem concentrating online. Like many web users, miniugg clicks on the links he finds on social networks, ugg mini chest nut reads a few lines, boots damen searches for attractive words, uggs tasman damen and then gets bored and moves on to next page, from which he will probably be just as distracted. "I spend a few seconds on it - not even minutes - and then I'm already somewhere else," says Handscombe, who is 35 years old and has a degree in creative writing from American University. But it's not just one thing online: Handscombe notices that he has the same behavior with novels. 鈥淚t's like your eyes are hovering over the words but you're not really absorbing what they're saying. When I realize it, I have to go back and start over." For cognitive neuroscientists, what happens in Handscombe is a matter of great interest and growing alarm. Humans, they warn, appear to be developing brainsdigital them with new circuits to flow and filter the stream of online information. This alternative type of reading is competing with deep reading circuits developed over several millennia. 鈥淚'm afraid that the superficial way we read during the day affects us when we need to read more thoroughly,鈥?says Maryanne Wolf, a cognitive neuroscientist at Tufts University who wrote 鈥淧roust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain鈥? If the growth of 24-hour all-news TV has given the world a culture of audio shreds, according to Wolf the internet is introducing a culture of visual shreds. The time spent online by American adults 鈥?on computers or mobile devices 鈥?is expected to have reached five hours daily in 2013, according to eMarketer estimates: three ...