You'll want to rethink how you use ChatGPT after reading this.
A recent MIT study conducted a complete brain scan analysis on 54 individuals aged 18-39.
Participants were randomly assigned to three groups of 18 each:
Group one: LLM (using ChatGPT)
Group two: Search Engine (using tools like Google)
Group three: brain-only (no external aids)
Participants completed essay-writing tasks across 3-4 sessions over 4 months.
Each session involved 20 minutes of writing under EEG (electroencephalogram) monitoring.
In Session 4, a crossover occurred: LLM users switched to Brain-only (LLM-to-Brain), and Brain-only users switched to LLM (Brain-to-LLM).
Post-task interviews assessed quoting ability, ownership, satisfaction, ethical concerns, and more.
The results found will probably shock you.
Group one (those using LLMs) showed the WEAKEST neural activity connection.
Neural activity dropped from 79 to 42 - a 47% decrease.
83% of ChatGPT users couldn't recall what they had written just a few minutes earlier.
Group three (brain-only) showed the strongest levels of brain activity (creative thinking, problem-solving).
ChatGPT helped users complete tasks 60% faster, BUT with nearly a -50% decrease in brain activity.
Researchers are calling this "cognitive debt" - short-term productivity gains at the expense of long-term critical thinking capabilities.
So, what can you do to ensure your brain activity doesnt atrophy by -50%?
Treat AI as ONLY a tool.
Use it to be more creative, learn, and expand your current thought processes.
Avoid relying on it 24/7/365.
Some basic practical tips:
• 2-3x/week have work sessions where you completely avoid AI (like the brain-only group in this study) • Read 10 pages/day (read slowly, take notes) • Journal daily (one paragraph minimum)
Your brain is like a muscle - if you don't use/train it, it'll become weaker and less efficent overtime.
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Is ChatGPT making us stupid?
Well, kinda.
The latest scientific data is going to shock you.
You'll want to rethink how you use ChatGPT after reading this.
A recent MIT study conducted a complete brain scan analysis on 54 individuals aged 18-39.
Participants were randomly assigned to three groups of 18 each:
Group one: LLM (using ChatGPT)
Group two: Search Engine (using tools like Google)
Group three: brain-only (no external aids)
Participants completed essay-writing tasks across 3-4 sessions over 4 months.
Each session involved 20 minutes of writing under EEG (electroencephalogram) monitoring.
In Session 4, a crossover occurred: LLM users switched to Brain-only (LLM-to-Brain), and Brain-only users switched to LLM (Brain-to-LLM).
Post-task interviews assessed quoting ability, ownership, satisfaction, ethical concerns, and more.
The results found will probably shock you.
Group one (those using LLMs) showed the WEAKEST neural activity connection.
Neural activity dropped from 79 to 42 - a 47% decrease.
83% of ChatGPT users couldn't recall what they had written just a few minutes earlier.
Group three (brain-only) showed the strongest levels of brain activity (creative thinking, problem-solving).
ChatGPT helped users complete tasks 60% faster, BUT with nearly a -50% decrease in brain activity.
Researchers are calling this "cognitive debt" - short-term productivity gains at the expense of long-term critical thinking capabilities.
So, what can you do to ensure your brain activity doesnt atrophy by -50%?
Treat AI as ONLY a tool.
Use it to be more creative, learn, and expand your current thought processes.
Avoid relying on it 24/7/365.
Some basic practical tips:
• 2-3x/week have work sessions where you completely avoid AI (like the brain-only group in this study)
• Read 10 pages/day (read slowly, take notes)
• Journal daily (one paragraph minimum)
Your brain is like a muscle - if you don't use/train it, it'll become weaker and less efficent overtime.