RE: {SABAHkini} Why the Internet Sucks You in Like a Black Hole

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Anthony Lammert

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May 29, 2013, 5:04:08 PM5/29/13
to sabahkini, sabahkini
There are always ‘professors’ out there to pin-point on human weakness. So long there is a road, there are always vehicles using it. There are ‘joy-riders’, drunks, sober drivers, crooks and many other personality types of various descriptions using the route. Alcoholic drinks in many forms too could be misused; there are social drinkers, habitual drunkards, many consider the concoctions as ‘legal highs’ that could dress up their respective sober personalities.
The Internet, used wisely, could enhance business enterprises, especially those dealing with communication style online. As an educationist I find the Internet valuable and viable income generator if used correctly and intelligently.
Cheers from me here on a cold Auckland morning and now comfortably communicating with several online students overseas.
Kotobian Do Tadau Kaamatan!
 
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From: SM Muthu
Sent: ‎29‎ ‎May‎ ‎2013 ‎12‎:‎59‎ ‎p.m.
To: SABAHANS
Subject: {SABAHkini} Why the Internet Sucks You in Like a Black Hole
 

Why the Internet Sucks You in Like a Black Hole

A lack of structural online boundaries tempts users into spending countless hours on the Web



 Image: Beltsazar, Shutterstock

"Checking Facebook should only take a minute."

Those are the famous last words of countless people every day, right before getting sucked into several hours of watching cat videos, commenting on Instagrammed sushi lunches, and Googling to find out what ever happened to Dolph Lundgren.

If that sounds like you, don't feel bad: That behavior is natural, given how the Internet is structured, experts say.

People are wired to compulsively seek unpredictable payoffs like those doled out on the Web. And the Internet's omnipresence and lack of boundaries encourage people to lose track of time, making it hard to exercise the willpower to turn it off.

"The Internet is not addictive in the same way as pharmacological substances are," said Tom Stafford, a cognitive scientist at the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom. "But it's compulsive; it's compelling; it's distracting." [10 Easy Paths to Self Destruction]

You've got mail

Humans are social creatures. As a result, people enjoy the social information available via email and the Web.

Email and social media have the same reward structure as that of a casino slot machine: Most of it is junk, but every so often, you hit the jackpot — in the case of the Internet, a tidbit of juicy gossip or a heartfelt email, Stafford said. The instantaneous payoff only strengthens the Internet's pull.

The Web's unpredictable payoffs train people much in the same way Ivan Pavlov trained dogs, which were conditioned in the 19th century to salivate when they heard a bell they associated with food.

Over time, people link a cue (e.g., an instant-message ping or the Facebook homepage) with a pleasurable rush of feel-good brain chemicals. People become habituated to seek that social rush over and over again, Stafford said.

Fight or flight

Reading emails or hunching over a screen can also activate humans' fight-or-flight response, said Linda Stone, a researcher who has studied the physiological effects of Internet use.

Stone has shown that about 80 percent of people temporarily stop breathing or breathe shallowly when they check their email or look at a screen — a condition she calls email apnea.

The Web often has important content that requires action or a response — for example, an assignment from the boss or engagement photos from a close friend — so people anticipate this and hold their breath as they look at their screens.

But breath-holding sets off a physiological cascade that prepares the body to face potential threats or anticipate surprises. Constantly activating this physical response can have negative health consequences, Stone said.

No limits

Another reason the Internet is so addictive is it lacks boundaries between tasks, Stafford said.

Someone may set out to "research something, and then accidentally go to Wikipedia, and then wind up trying to find out what ever happened to Depeche Mode," Stafford said, referring to the music band.

Studies suggest willpower is like a muscle: It can be strengthened, but can also become exhausted.

Because the Internet is always "on," staying on task requires constantly flexing that willpower muscle, which can exhaust a person's self-control.

 

 

 

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CORRUPTION is a HEINOUS CRIME - for it's a crime against the POOR, the DISABLED and the WEAKEST members of society and a crime AGAINST FUTURE GENERATIONS.
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