The brain in your pocket: Evidence that Smartphones are used to supplant thinking. Barr, N., Pennycook, G., Stolz, J. A., & Fugelsang, J. A. Computers in Human Behavior, 48:473–480, July, 2015.
The brain in your pocket: Evidence that Smartphones are used to supplant thinking [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
With the advent of Smartphone technology, access to the internet and its associated knowledge base is at one’s fingertips. What consequences does this have for human cognition? We frame Smartphone use as an instantiation of the extended mind—the notion that our cognition goes beyond our brains—and in so doing, characterize a modern form of cognitive miserliness. Specifically, that people typically forego effortful analytic thinking in lieu of fast and easy intuition suggests that individuals may allow their Smartphones to do their thinking for them. Our account predicts that individuals who are relatively less willing and/or able to engage effortful reasoning processes may compensate by relying on the internet through their Smartphones. Across three studies, we find that those who think more intuitively and less analytically when given reasoning problems were more likely to rely on their Smartphones (i.e., extended mind) for information in their everyday lives. There was no such association with the amount of time using the Smartphone for social media and entertainment purposes, nor did boredom proneness qualify any of our results. These findings demonstrate that people may offload thinking to technology, which in turn demands that psychological science understand the meshing of mind and media to adequately characterize human experience and cognition in the modern era.
@article{barr_brain_2015,
	title = {The brain in your pocket: {Evidence} that {Smartphones} are used to supplant thinking},
	volume = {48},
	issn = {0747-5632},
	shorttitle = {The brain in your pocket},
	url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0747563215001272},
	doi = {10.1016/j.chb.2015.02.029},
	abstract = {With the advent of Smartphone technology, access to the internet and its associated knowledge base is at one’s fingertips. What consequences does this have for human cognition? We frame Smartphone use as an instantiation of the extended mind—the notion that our cognition goes beyond our brains—and in so doing, characterize a modern form of cognitive miserliness. Specifically, that people typically forego effortful analytic thinking in lieu of fast and easy intuition suggests that individuals may allow their Smartphones to do their thinking for them. Our account predicts that individuals who are relatively less willing and/or able to engage effortful reasoning processes may compensate by relying on the internet through their Smartphones. Across three studies, we find that those who think more intuitively and less analytically when given reasoning problems were more likely to rely on their Smartphones (i.e., extended mind) for information in their everyday lives. There was no such association with the amount of time using the Smartphone for social media and entertainment purposes, nor did boredom proneness qualify any of our results. These findings demonstrate that people may offload thinking to technology, which in turn demands that psychological science understand the meshing of mind and media to adequately characterize human experience and cognition in the modern era.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2023-07-02},
	journal = {Computers in Human Behavior},
	author = {Barr, Nathaniel and Pennycook, Gordon and Stolz, Jennifer A. and Fugelsang, Jonathan A.},
	month = jul,
	year = {2015},
	pages = {473--480},
}

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