Cape Argus

Flicking between gadgets can scatter your brain – study

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AS YOU flick between smartphone, computer and TV, it may feel you are giving yourself a mental workout.

But using several gadgets at once is bad for your brain, scientists warn.

It releases a hormone that can have the same effect on thought processes as being high on drugs, they say.

Such multitaski­ng lowers your IQ because people who, for example, check Facebook on their smartphone while watching TV are training their brains to be disorganis­ed.

When you focus on one task at a time and take in informatio­n properly, it is stored in the hippocampu­s – the “library of the brain”, where data is organised, categorise­d and made easy to recall. However, when you flick between gadgets, the informatio­n is sent to another part of the brain, the striatum. This is the region involved in planning movements and motivation, rather than storing data, so any informatio­n it receives is much harder to recall.

Sending data there too often establishe­s a pattern, rewiring the brain to try to store informatio­n in the wrong place, researcher­s at the University of Copenhagen found. It is the opposite of the effect seen in London taxi drivers, who develop the region of their brain that deals with mapping routes, and violin players, who develop the part that controls their left hand. The scientists, who undertook the study with marketing agency HeyHuman, say that every time people switch between gadgets they release L-dopa, a hormone that produces dopamine.

Raised levels of dopamine are also associated with drug abuse, and the scientists say the effect that flicking between gadgets has on cognitive ability is sometimes “worse than being stoned on cannabis”.

“Use of technology in our everyday lives is damaging the brain, causing it to rewire itself and lowering our IQ as a result,” they added.

“Our brains could, thanks to our reliance on and overuse of technology, be heading for the scrap heap.”

The findings are likely to alarm the millions who regularly sit in front of the television, simultaneo­usly checking social networks or sending e-mails from their smartphone­s or tablet devices. The report says more than 80 percent of cellphone owners do this.

The study asked people to use their smartphone or tablet while watching TV and then tested how much informatio­n they could think about at once.

Most said using multiple devices made them feel “productive and efficient” and all felt comfortabl­e flicking between devices. However, just over half could remember what had been on TV.

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