Mon Jul 16, 2007 3:24PM EDT
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Here's a trend that has been years in the making. Since the advent of speed dial on land lines, people have been training themselves that memory is unimportant, placing every phone number you could need at the touch of a button. Now science has proven it: Phones, computers, and PDAs are making us dumb.
The stats: A quarter of UK residents (these studies always come out of Britain) don't know their home phone number. Only one-third know the birthdays of their immediate family. Half use one password, exclusively, presumably because they just can't remember any more.
The problem is pretty simple at heart: The less you use your memory, the study says, the worse it gets. The study indicates, shockingly, that people in their 50s and 60s have generally better memory than people in their 30s. Why? The older group was tasked with committing more to memory when they were younger, "training" their brains appropriately. Our gadgets make it simple to offload our memory to electronic devices. That's a good thing when it comes to keeping track of the 1000 people in your address book (each with multiple phone numbers and email addresses), but maybe we're taking it too far?
The good news is that you can exercise your brain without memorizing numbers by rote. Games like Brain Age and Sudoku and other mental stimulation can do just as good a job at keeping your memory sharp (and possibly even ward off ailments like Alzheimer's), the experts say.
Previously: Meetings also make you stupid
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There is a very interesting book by Neil Postman called Technopoly that touches on this matter as well as other illeffects of technology. Postman basically warns us to be wary of all technology: it's intention may be good, but it also causes harm.
Think about it- so many kids nowadays just plug numbers into their phones and don't care to memorize them... when emergencies occur and god forbid they don't have their cells, how will they know who to call if they can't remember their parents work numbers or other emergency contact numbers? This article comes as no surprise, however the title doesn't fit this... it's more like cell phones replace memory, not make us dumb.
even though i have a phone, PDA , and other storing electronic devices...i still have over half of my friends' numbers, addresses, etc. memorized...they dont make me dumb...they promote my memorization even further because everytime i text someone i end up memorizing the number...so this is a bunch of crap
uhm.i think this article is dumb.cell phones can help our hand-eye cordination...by texting DUHH!!!! try researching that info.
if cell phones are making us dumb just imagine how stupid we are going to be in 10 years after everyone is using GPS navigation. We are doomed. ;)
And I was worried about not being able to remember my ph# from 50 yrs ago. Might just be something to the report.
if cell phones are making us dumb just imagine how stupid we are going to be in 10 years after everyone is using GPS navigation. We are doomed. ;)
That was the dumbest report I have read in a long time.
general - you're onto something... I likey. ferrari - it's "necessarily", but then again, your comment has got so many typos, I'll just leave it at that... The article should have just left it at "hand-held electronics may lead to decreased memory" and called it good. Or perhaps the author forgot the meaning of "dumb"...
i have a ds with big brain accademy it was fun for a little while but then it got extremly boring after seeing this i might excersinse my memory on it....Sigh we'll see how long that lasts....
I think this guys concerns are unfounded. The mere fact that this technology exists is a testament to human ingenuity. Life is becoming more streamlined with the use of these gadgets, and one can accomplish more in minutes than a middle-aged technophobe could undertake in weeks. Get with the change or be left behind, dude.
Interesting point. But you still have to memorize how to use all these features on your phone, computer, palm pilot, ect. I have trouble remembering all that, so does that make me dumb or dumber?!
Unless all of the people in the UK study were under the age of 4 or over the age of 100, something is seriously wrong there. Best brain exercise? Try reading a book, something long forgotten by most.
hahahahaha, You know what I just realized, this article is full of bull. Come on, computers, phones, cellphones are just smaller, more easy to carry pieces of paper... to some degree... the fact that we have them doesnt mean anything. Correct me if I'm wrong but dont people, if they dont have a cell phone/computer/pda usually right down something that they cant deliberately remember? Such as birthdays and phone numbers? Come on, take into all perspectives of the situation. Cellsphones dont make you dumb, they're just handy devises that were created so that we dont have to stress ourselves with keeping track of all the paper. Anyways, whatever, I thought I'd share my honest opinion.
This article is garbage. Not memorizing numbers does not mean you are not using your mind to memorize something else. Or to flip things around, if folks in their 50s and 60s were asked to perform technological tasks that folks in their 20s and 30s commonly perform, I'd be willing to bet the older groups wouldn't do nearly as well. To make matters worse, the article suggests buying games to improve memory -- games that have been suggested for older people so that they keep their memories sharp! How ironic is that? (My cynical nature tells me this is a b.s. corporate article.)
It is such a shame that some of [us] have to rely on redial buttons and address books to remember things. Not knowing the birthdays of your immediatly family is almost sad! Myself having a photographic memory, i feel is an unfair advantage; looking at something or hearing something and storing it and being able to remember for quite long periods of time. Memory is a valued tool though, I'll tell ya.... :) generaln00b- You are absolutely right!
We are all doomed mjackle. Have you gone out in public and really looked into people's eyes lately? They are often empty and lifeless, void of any spark of intelligence. There is something very wrong when people don't see a link between memory and intelligence. One reinforces the other and vice versa, naturally. Modern technology, while useful and convenient, is making us lazy. A lazy brain is a dumb brain.
THE REALLY DUMB THING, THEN, I THINK,......HMMMMM....LET ME THINK..... WOULD BE TO LOSE YOUR darn CELL PHONE!!!!!!!!!
all i know is everytime i call someone to ask them for someone elses phone #. They say it's on my cell phone let me call you back after i look. Does that make you dumb. Probably not. There always has been and will be dumb people.
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6 Posted by ferrari61590 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:59PM EDT Report Abuse
i agree. you dont necceseraly need to remember things to be smart. figureing things out through logic is pretty smart. not much memory used there