“
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Thanks
to search engines, most simple facts don’t need to be remembered. They
can be accessed with a few keystrokes, plucked from ubiquitous
server-stored external memory — and that may be changing how our own
memories are maintained.
A study of 46 college
students found lower rates of recall on newly-learned facts when
students thought those facts were saved on a computer for later
recovery.
If you think a fact
is conveniently available online, then, you may be less apt to learn it.
As ominous as that
sounds,
however, study co-author and Columbia University psychologist Elizabeth
Sparrow said it’s just another form of so-called transactive memory,
exhibited by people working in groups in which facts and expertise are
distributed.
“It’s very similar to
how
we use people in our lives,” said Sparrow. “The internet is really just
an interface with a lot of other people.”
[The Full Monty]
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When WW III shuts down
electricity, Amazon Bushmen will be the smartest people on earth.
There are other dangers
too.
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