In the article “ Multitasking Can Make You Lose… Um… Focus” author Alina Tugend presents various problems on how multitasking can hurt you rather than help you. Edward Hallowell argues “you have to keep in mind that you sacrifice focus when you do this” (Hallowell) while multitasking between talking on the phone and doing laundry disturbs and interrupts your focus on the conversation you’re having on the phone. In Alina Tugend’s article “ Multitasking Can Make You Lose… Um… Focus” shows the disparate reasons on how multitasking does not always help you but can rather hurt you. A study by the RAC foundation found the reaction was 35 percent slower when writing a text message slower than driving drunk or stoned. Alina argues that while multitasking…
In "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" Nicholas Carr argues his deep concern on the use of the Internet and how it is affecting our brains. Carr feels like he has built upon the habit of skimming through articles for research. As a frequent user he has built such a strong habit of this that he can now no longer have the patience to sit down and read an actual book. For it lacks the instant gratification he is so used to getting from the Internet: "What the net seems to be doing is chipping away from my capacity for concentration and contemplation," Carr confesses. The Internet is changing the way its user’s minds process information. People are losing concentration easier than before and instead of truly reading material, they are skimming and mentally…
In the essay “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” by Nicholas Carr. Carr speaks on how over the last decade his focus and ability to concentrate has been declining due to the fact that he has a plethora of knowledge available to him on his smartphone or computer, thus he is not able to focus on a task at hand for as long as he could before the age of information. Carr claims that his mind is changing for the worse and backs his evidence with first hand accounts of respected scholars who also share the same fate as he does. “Is Google Making Us Stupid?” is an article that delves deep into the age of information and can explain why it is much easier for people to procrastinate today than it was a decade ago.…
It is an illusion that multitasking helps us do different things simultaneously where in fact we are sacrificing focus.…
In the article “Hooked on Gadgets and Paying a Mental Price” by Matt Richtel, we learn about the effects of being consumed by technology as well as multitasking. In the article, Richtel provides us with a real life example of the Campbell’s, and how Mr. Campbell’s addiction almost cost him a lucrative contract for his startup company. Also, we learn about how he could not even enjoy a family vacation without having his technological fix. Richtel also gives us hard scientific facts about the effects of technology and multitasking, such as the fact that multitaskers are less likely to be able to sort out irrelevant information and that multitaskers do worse when trying to juggle between tasks.…
In his article “Is Google Making us Stupid?” Nicholas Carr, a Dartmouth and Harvard graduate, and member of encyclopedia Britannica’s editorial board of advisors, poses the argument that the constant use of sources such as Google can reshape the thought process in a negative way. He has found the loss of ability to read for prolonged amounts of time without getting distracted. He is also having a hard time retaining the information he is reading. This made him pose the question of what has caused such a change? The answer that came to him was that it had to be related to the amount of Internet reading, watching, and writing he did. He wasn’t having these…
In his essay “Is google making us stupid” Nicholas Carr explains how the internet has helped us to gather vast amounts of information very quick, but also how it has affected our attention span when the time comes to read long pieces of texts. Carr also feels that our brains are constantly getting rewired due to the amount of time we spend online has caused him to lose concentration when he is reading. Besides, make it easier to find information and rewiring our brains the internet has changed the way we comprehend what we are reading. Carr states that before the internet he could easily get caught in the argument of what he was reading and that he no longer does it because his concentration starts to drift away after reading a couple of pages.…
Digital Distractions Nicholas Carr discusses how technology has influenced the way individuals think and process information in his book The Shallows. Carr argues that people's ability to focus closely, conduct critical thought, and recall information is being negatively impacted by the continuous interruptions and easy access to information on the internet. (Carr,1). “ The price we pay to assume technology’s power is alienation. The toll can be particularly high with our technology.…
Nicholas Carr believes a person often becomes distracted due to the amount of time that they have consumed on the Internet. In Carr’s article, he’s not necessarily saying that Google is making us “stupid,” but the fact that there is so much that can be going on Carr then formed a hypothesis on why he thinks people are easily distracted, the Internet. The Internet contains numerous of information, which caused individuals to change the way they process their thoughts, in another word, the way they think. He tried to argue that technology is taking part of forming in his thoughts. He makes suggestions that the Internet is changing the way our mind works and that it has negative consequences on the mind.…
Since the early 1990’s multitasking has been thought of as an efficient way of saving time in our busy everyday lives. Emailing and chatting with multiple people at once online, watching television and talking on the phone are a couple of examples of how people tend to juggle multiple tasks.…
Multitasking Hurts Performances but Makes You Feel Better, the title says it all. The authors’ main reason for this article is to share the truth about multitasking with the public. The article talks about studies taken on individual students over a period of time and their urge for multitasking. The students who multitasked seem to think that when they are studying and listening to music, watching television, texting, or on the internet that it makes them more productive. In reality the students are only obtaining an emotional boost from doing so. The author argues that when juggling too many tasks that you will perform poorly so you should refrain from doing so. They also claim that if you are a victim of multitasking now, you will most likely continue this trend and make it a habit. “It is critical that we carefully examine the long-term influence of media multitasking on how we perform on cognitive tasks.”…
reading incessantly on the Internet, we scatter our minds, lessen our focus, and diminish our…
Technology has made it possible to multitask and soon, corporate workers began to include multitasking as a proficiency to portray themselves as tech savvy and efficient. The article “Who can remember life before Multitask” in the New York Times Magazine, 2001, suggested ideas on how to make use of the “multitasking hot spot” section of the brain.…
“Scientists say juggling e-mail, phone calls and other incoming information can change how people think and behave.” (Attached to Technology and Paying a Price) They also say that peoples’ ability to focus is being weakened by bursts of information coming from technology and the internet. These bursts cause a primitive impulse to respond to the immediate interruptions. The impulses causes a stimulation of excitement that researchers say can be addictive. Even after “unplugging” people would be craving the stimulation created by the electronic device. (Source 3)…
William Shakespeare’s plays Hamlet and Macbeth have similarities and differences. These plays are both tragedies that use supernatural incidents, and consist of a hero that has a tragic flaw. One of Hamlet’s main problems is that he takes a long time to seek revenge that he promised his ghost father he would accomplish. Macbeth, on the other hand, tends to act quickly and effectively. In both plays there are characters that relate to one another.…