(Copyright: Science Photo Library) |
Being online does change your brain, but so does making a cup of tea. A
better question to ask is what parts of the brain are regular internet
users using.
This modern age has brought with it a new set of worries. As well as
watching our weight and worrying about our souls, we now have to worry
about our brain fitness too – if you believe the headlines. Is instant
messaging eroding the attention centres of our brains? Are Facebook,
Twitter and other social media tools preventing you from forming normal
human bonds? And don't forget email – apparently it releases the same
addictive neurochemicals as crack cocaine!
Plenty of folk have
been quick to capitalise on this neuro-anxiety. Amazon's virtual shelves
groan with brain-training books and games. (I confess I am not entirely
innocent myself). You can fight the cognitive flab, these games promise, if you work that grey matter like a muscle.
But is this true? Are sudoku puzzles the only thing stopping the species turning into a horde of attention-deficient, socially-dysfunctional, email addicts – part human, part smartphone?
But is this true? Are sudoku puzzles the only thing stopping the species turning into a horde of attention-deficient, socially-dysfunctional, email addicts – part human, part smartphone?
Fear
not, there is some good news from neuroscience. But first, it is my
duty to tell you the bad news. You may want to put down your phone and
take note, this is the important bit.
The truth is that everything
you do changes your brain. Everything. Every little thought or
experience plays a role in the constant wiring and rewiring of your
neural networks. So there is no escape. Yes, the internet is rewiring
your brain. But so is watching television. And having a cup of tea. Or
not having a cup of tea. Or thinking about the washing on Tuesdays. Your
life, however you live it, leaves traces in the brain.
Brain workout
Worrying
about the internet is just the latest in a long line of fears society
has had about the changes technologies might bring. People worried about
books when they first became popularly available. In Ancient Greece,
Socrates worried about the effect of writing, saying it would erode
young people's ability to remember. The same thing happened with
television and telephones. These technologies did change us, and the way
we live our lives, but nothing like the doom-mongers predicted would
stem from them.
But is the internet affecting our brains in a
different, more extraordinary way? There is little evidence to suggest
harm. Here we are, millions of us, including me and you, right now,
using the internet, and we seem okay. Some people worry that, even
though we cannot see any ill-effects of the internet on our minds, there
might be something hidden going on. I am not so worried about this, and
I'll tell you why
We regularly do things that have a profound
effect on our brains – such as reading or competitive sports – with
little thought for our brain fitness. When scientists look at people who
have spent thousands of hours on an activity they often see changes in
the brain. Taxi drivers, famously, have a larger hippocampus,
a part of the brain recruited for navigation. Musicians’ brains devote
more neural territory to brain regions needed for playing their
instruments. So much so, in fact, that if you look at the motor cortex
of string players you see bulges on one side (because the fine motor
control for playing a violin, for example, is only on one hand), whereas
the motor cortex of keyboard players bulges on both sides (because piano playing requires fine control of both hands).
So
practice definitely can change our brains. By accepting this notion,
though, we replace a vague worry about the internet with a specific
worry: if we use the internet regularly, what are we practicing?
Get a life
In
the absence of any substantial evidence, I would hazard a guess that
the majority of internet use is either information search or
communication, using email and social media. If this is so, using the
internet should affect our brains so that we are better at these things.
Probably this is already happening, part of a general cultural change
which involves us getting better and better at dealing with abstract information.
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