Does Google Actually Make Us Dumber? (buzzfeednews.com)
Another spate of high-profile and provocative psychology studies have failed to replicate, dealing blows to the theories that fiction makes readers empathetic, for example, or that the internet makes us dumber. From a report: At a time when psychology researchers are increasingly concerned about the rigor of their field, five laboratories set out to repeat 21 influential studies. Experiments in just 13 of those papers -- or 62% -- held up, according to an analysis published Monday. The eight papers that did not fully replicate -- seven in Science, one in Nature -- have been cited hundreds of times in scientific literature and many were widely covered by the media.
Failing to replicate isn't definitive proof that a finding is false, particularly in cases where other studies support the same general idea. And some scientists told BuzzFeed News they do not agree with how the replications were done. Still, the new findings are part of an overwhelming, and troubling, trend. The so-called reproducibility crisis has hit research in many fields of science, from artificial intelligence to cancer. Shoddy psychology research has received the most attention, with a 2015 report replicating just 36% of 97 studies. It makes sense that scientists want to publish data that is surprising or counterintuitive. "That's not a bad thing in science, because that's how science breaks boundaries," said Brian Nosek, a University of Virginia psychologist and executive director of the Center for Open Science, which led the replication project. But too few scientists, he said, recognize the inherent uncertainty of their splashy results. "It's okay if some of those turn out to be wrong," he said.
Failing to replicate isn't definitive proof that a finding is false, particularly in cases where other studies support the same general idea. And some scientists told BuzzFeed News they do not agree with how the replications were done. Still, the new findings are part of an overwhelming, and troubling, trend. The so-called reproducibility crisis has hit research in many fields of science, from artificial intelligence to cancer. Shoddy psychology research has received the most attention, with a 2015 report replicating just 36% of 97 studies. It makes sense that scientists want to publish data that is surprising or counterintuitive. "That's not a bad thing in science, because that's how science breaks boundaries," said Brian Nosek, a University of Virginia psychologist and executive director of the Center for Open Science, which led the replication project. But too few scientists, he said, recognize the inherent uncertainty of their splashy results. "It's okay if some of those turn out to be wrong," he said.
The answer is yes.
The full headline reads "Does Google Actually Make Us Dumber? That Study — And Many Others — Were Just Called Into Question."
I have no idea. Let me use Google to find the answer.
#DeleteFacebook
... but sciencism certainly does. That is, the faith that science can explain all that there is to explain, that allows for personal subjective truth at the same time demanding universal objective answers from a discipline (science) that cannot get deep enough into epistemological stack to answer said questions.
A study in the 1980's suggested that 48% of them do
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
The two Federal scientists who collected the evidence and helped NOVA produce the video were reassigned to desk jobs in outer Mongolia.
Running with Linux for over 20 years!
Fuck them deep in the colon with a rusty triangle file.
Fuck BuzzFeed.
We've always been this dumb, and we always will be this dumb. Around 2000 years ago some hippies thought a man came back from the dead and flew away. In 2018 people think shooting victims are crisis actors. In 4000 AD some morons will think Loftnarg is a Ffppppthip or something.
Look for the answer to a techincal question, either get a forum post telling someone to google it (when they google'd it) or an ad for reimage plus.
I am thinking a strong yes.
But sure plays a mean pinball!
But not stupid. I think you meant stupid.
"Failing to replicate isn't definitive proof that a finding is false, particularly in cases where other studies support the same general idea."
Failure to replicate using the exact experimental guidelines is fundamentally a mark of a failed experiment with bad results. The hamstering about other studies proving it without the exact same methodology is just feel good bullsh1t and is a pox on the scientific method.
This is why no one takes the social scientists seriously. It is doubly why we shouldn't waste government research money and subsidized student loans on trite BS like this.
The only sciences that should be taken seriously are those with a track record of reproducibility by others through peer review. Or at least have a large foundation of it as to help guide the more theoretical aspects of it.
Most of the crap peddled through the liberal arts isn't credible, reproducible, and is nothing more than make work for people who couldn't hack it elsewhere. /unpopular opinion. Go ahead mods, do your worst!
impressive, you think humanity will last that long. I give it less than a hundred years.
The crisis isn't really in research: it's neither surprising nor problematic that most experimental and theoretical results reported in the literature have problems, are hard/impossible to replicate, or contain outright errors. That's a normal and healthy part of science.
The actual crisis is in the rush of modern society has to use scientific results as the basis of decision making. You should usually only consider scientific results to be "established" or "true" after several generations of scientists have passed and after they have been reproduced many times by many different approaches. If you use scientific results earlier than that, it's a big gamble.
No. Google doesn't make us dumber, but Cable News certainly does.
FTFY
At lease this is my experience
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Is it possible that a lax review policy is also a contributor to the less than rigorous science they publish.
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
More FAKE NEWS posts trying to vilify the ALL-TIME favorite president! Respect your red and blue stripes!
Internet is not much different than scribes writing books in Middle Ages. We always preferred to store information outside of our brain - books, encyclopedias, and now to internet/wikipedia. Internet just enabled quick and free access to information.
https://www.thenewatlantis.com...
I'm getting old and can't remember shit (CRS) , I use a search service when I can't remember something, or am curious about something I don't know.
I don't use google search though...
Yes.
Next question?
Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
Iâ(TM)m hoping it will happen sooner!
So yes. It's best new feature is ignoring one random keyword from your search and coming up with uselessly unrelated results.
As in all other professions, 50% of scientists are below average. Shouldn't 50% of scientific studies be like that, also?
We used to have to remember things, like phone numbers, conversion rates, and temperatures to cook things. Today, all of that memorization space doesn't need to be used. If you can pose the right question to a search engine, generally you get the right answer.
It seems that critical thinking is what is being changed dramatically here. Us humans like a good story to help us contextualize what we are learning. The internet is now full of contextualized summaries of everything under the sun. A good portion of what people call "Fake News" is categorized under this.
This is completely changing the way that humans process data now that most people have a second "brain" in their hands. It makes people good at the higher level of working on individual problems native to their studies. What suffers is the human soul. People need connections, not rules and laws.
Are people dumber? People "know" a whole lot, but without context its fairly worthless.
--
True knowledge exists in knowing that you know nothing. - Socrates
You underestimate just how tenacious human beings are. Civilization may collapse and billions may die due to global warming, overpopulation induced famines, someone releasing a genetically engineered disease or any of a thousand other apocalyptic scenarios, but there will still be small groups of humans here and there, running their own little post-apocalyptic subsistence farms.
We're the fucking cockroaches of the mammal kingdom.
How do these errors in scientific studies relate to Google making us dumber?
There is a terrible gap in this summary indicating that this leads to that, without any explanation of how it happens. Perhaps because it is assumed that we are using Google search to find these studies, and then being mislead about the information presented? There are at least two problems with that thinking: First, a Google search cannot show us the paywalled studies; we may get an abstract or a third-hand comment about the study. Second, being given misleading information does not make us stupid.
Intelligence is not related to the data we store. We may be told that Google searches make us stupid, and that may be true or false, but storing that information does not change our IQ at all. We all have many wrong bits of data in our memory. What you are reading right now may be totally wrong, but it won't make you dumber than you already are.
However, you can avoid negative results from misleading information by storing it in your memory in a different manner: When a wiki tells you, for instance, that 'global warming' will result in this or that by the year 20nn, you can store that information with a tag such as 'this source suggests xxx will happen, and they have a pretty good argument to support the theory'. In this way, you are not accepting the theory as fact, but as a proposition from a source that you tend to respect. Never allow yourself to fully believe or disbelieve any proposition except that which you are reading now.
...omphaloskepsis often...
Somebody has to break the ice...
Maybe it's google's fault I'm too stupid to understand, but how does:
"There seems to be difficulty replicating the results in a number of psychological studies"
=
"Google makes us dumber"
?
Is the OP asserting that since it's easier to link to unproved sources, we're getting shitty information as true?
Because I'd see it another way: first, the journals mentioned like Nature aren't exactly shoddy - they're long term credentialed journals in the field. I'd argue that these studies would have been published pre-internet, it's unlikely they eever would have been questioned/debunked without the broad access available by the internet.
-Styopa
This is going to be hard to suggest, but these results are actually good news. I used to be in the field of psychology research, so I know all the dirt on how these studies work and the techniques researchers have to do to get published. The fact that over 60% of the findings replicated is very surprising, for a lot of reasons.
1. Top journals publish flashy research. Rather than doing technical research on the mechanisms of empathy, a study showing "fiction reading increases empathy" is more likely to be published in Science, and for a grad student, get you a grant/job/life. Building up more incremental research with stronger theoretical foundations is a lot harder to get published.
2. There's a lot of competition. People want grants/jobs/life and so they have to publish. But anyone can steal your ideas. One of my greatest ideas was stolen as a grad student, which is why I pretty much left the field. It's easy for someone with a bigger lab to do the same study, find similar results, and then publish it. So you have to get your ideas out quickly and you really can't share many of the flashy ones, because this could happen. So this creates a perverse incentive not to replicate the most flashy findings, because they are the ones that give you all the glory.
3. People make it very hard to replicate their research, because once someone gets a program of research, that is their gravy train. If I have a great finding that gets me a great paper and a top-level job, I need to keep up that research to get tenure. All those replication studies are necessary for my job, so again there's an incentive not to replicate other labs' research.
4. The sample sizes are way too low for the type of research being done, which is why false positives are very likely. fMRI research uses sample sizes that are 20-40. My dissertation used 30 participants, because it was all I could afford. To make great generalizable conclusions, I'd probably need 100 or more. So should I stop doing research? No, I should publish it and others should replicate it, or not. By replicating it in slightly different conditions, it increases the external validity of the findings.
So long story short, 60% replication is a good number, and should be how science goes. It's not the researchers' fault or the fault of psychology as a science, since studying complex systems is very hard. It's just the fault of a broken system that equates a published paper with truth, rather than one piece of evidence.
They should have called the company "jupiter.com". So then we could say that boys go to jupiter to get more stupider.
It is like a box of chocolates.
Perhaps the answer is already right in front of you, and you don't see it.
This is why no one takes the social scientists seriously.
Maybe you don't but we base most of our regulatory policies on the social sciences so it's pretty safe to say they get taken quite seriously. And they should be because you want those topics studied in a scientific manner.
It is doubly why we shouldn't waste government research money and subsidized student loans on trite BS like this.
If you want to claim the money isn't being spent wisely or that there isn't enough scientific rigor in the research then I might not agree but at least it's a rational position to take that you might be able to defend. Saying we shouldn't have student loans for people studying economics or education or law or geography or anthropology is essentially saying we don't need those professions and shouldn't bother conducting research in them which is blatantly absurd.
Most of the crap peddled through the liberal arts isn't credible, reproducible, and is nothing more than make work for people who couldn't hack it elsewhere.
Mathematics and natural sciences are considered "liberal arts" and there is quite a lot of crap there too. See string theory for an example of a physics model that has had lots of money dumped in with a lot of useless, wrong and dead end results to show for it. There is nothing about the social sciences that is incompatible with conducting quality scientific inquiry. It's not clear to me why you seem to have such distaste for social sciences other than some vague dislike for subjects which are inherently messy and not easily reducible to nice neat formulas.
Does having a contact list on your phone rather than remembering everybody's 10-digit phone number and email address make us dumber?
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
Duh?!
Before humans invented writing, we had fantastic memories. People could recite huge poems. We can't do that anymore because we no longer waste our memories to remember everything word for word, not when we can write things down. Instead we use our brains for more important things - like figuring out what search terms we can feed to Google to get our desired result.
Same thing with Google, it has replaced an OLD skill that we used to use as an approximation for intelligence. The skill was not a measure of intelligence, it was a way to figure out how intelligent you were. The skill is no longer useful, and is therefore no longer an accurate way to estimate intelligence.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
Well, just look at the 92, 96, 00,04,08,12 elections if you want the answers to that flipping question.
When the internet became "global" people stopped questioning things. Well, it's on the internet, so
it must be true. Clinton x2, Bush 43 x2, Obama x2. Yes Virginia, the (un)education system along
with the internet has made us STUPID.
It really is, you know.
Picture this, if you got an answer to everything you had on your mind, would you have anything on your mind at all?
One of the core essentials of development, and even human development (developing ourselves, bettering ourselves, expanding our horizon of knowledge), is being able to ask the right questions. The moment we stop looking for answers, we become complacent, lazy and non-seeking.
This is one of the things that I noticed already with Altavista, yes - pre google times, this is the reason that sites like Reddit and Slashdot exist, a place where we can vent our thoughts and see them without having to "Google" them first. If you don't know what to look for, Google will do nothing for you. Google is essentially a search engine, and it's good at what it does and for what it is.
But that's just it - the difference between a search engine and say, the old library, is that if you walk into the library, you'll have thousands of books available to you at a glance, meaning you could discover something you didn't know exist along the way, and thus get ideas for your particular interest, maybe interest you didn't know you had, because you didn't know they where there.
Google's dilemma is exactly there, you can search for something - if you already know it exist.
IF...you know!
What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
I think you're reading that wrong. "Only some of the submitted papers are reviewed in depth." (Emphasis added.) Most papers submitted to Science suffer from what's called "desk rejection". That is, the editors reject the submission almost immediately as being too low quality or not interesting enough for Science readers. I can say with little chance of correction that all of the primary research articles which get published in Science are "reviewed in depth". (I specify "primary research articles", as news features, opinion pieces and some perspective/review pieces may not be reviewed - but the studies in question don't fall under these categories.)
Now certainly there's issues with peer review, and the fact that at least two external scientists have reviewed a paper and signed off on it with peer review doesn't necessarily guarantee its quality. But to say that there are primary research articles which are published in Science which haven't gone through peer review is grossly inaccurate.
Google allows someone to quickly find information related to their interest. If someone is interested in learning something generally productive, searches for that thing on Google, and absorbs that information, Google can be said to have aided in making that person more informed or "smarter". If Google also directs that person to areas where discourse on that topic are had and the user can then gain analytical insight, then Google has again aided in making that person "smarter".
But what if the subject is already (generally) smart? Google can be used as a crutch to relinquish the need to remember so many things because easy access to the information via an internet search giant could arguably make that person "dumber". I know that there are many facts that I used to desperately grasp onto based on the expectation of needing to recall them instantly (various mathematical formulae), but given the prevalence of internet connectivity, I've just allowed myself to forget them because I can look them us as needed.
Really, all Google does is help you be more of what you want to be. If you want to be smarter, learn new things, learn how to think better, etc. then Google can help point you in the right direction. If you just want to read about conspiracy theories and entertainment news, then Google can direct you to that as well.
Then the answer is no.
Google's success and dominance are merely proof that the majority of us are dumb. Google didn't make people dumb - they just took advantage of people's pre-existing dumbness.
'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
The actual crisis is in the rush of modern society has to use scientific results as the basis of decision making. You should usually only consider scientific results to be "established" or "true" after several generations of scientists have passed and after they have been reproduced many times by many different approaches. If you use scientific results earlier than that, it's a big gamble.
If we still did that we would be arguing if this newfangled lightbulb is worth putting in our carriage houses while limping around due to polio.
The fact is large amounts of "science" is crap and some of it is critical right now. The same can be said for the people that make it. Science and scientists should not get a pass for being incompetent. Science journalists should not get a pass for not understanding science.
The actual crisis is in the rush of modern society has to use scientific results as the basis of decision making.
I don't really see the problem with that. The thing is, you're presenting it as a bad option, but you're failing to account for the other option, which is making the decision on even less information. That's even worse.
Science is the best tool we have. Sometimes it's wrong, but it's more likely to be right than whatever other criteria you could use for making a decision.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
OK, and what happens when we need those results right now? For example climate change, by that logic we should just now be starting to develop technology to mitigate it. Whereas the preponderance of the evidence is that we should have been taking it seriously 40 years ago, and possibly earlier.
All aspects of civilization that reduce our need to be intelligent to thrive make us dumber as individuals - after normalizing out the increase in total intelligence caused by reduction of stunting due to nutritional deficiencies. This has been long known. Do you teach someone to run by giving them a crutch at birth? or a mobile chair?
But, we are not just individuals. A large portion of our genome actually encodes our society by giving us communication skills, skills to read people, wants, etc. We are an organism as a whole too. The idea that we are no longer evolving is blown apart when you look at the evolution of the larger organism.
Our society is being made smarter and more capable by these advances. The sacrifice in individual intelligence is thus being more than compensated for.
Basically, nature is always building a better idiot.
Cheap storage VM.
He said already No many years ago.
Your American education system makes you dumber
That's a false dichotomy. See, I'm not saying that individuals shouldn't use all available science to make their decisions, I'm saying that society shouldn't do so.
Does Google Actually Make Us Dumber?
Requiem for the American Dream
Einstein had a formidable amount of information committed to his memory. That and he knew what he could look up.
Now-a-days, people foolishly think they can "just google it." Not that they'd be able to tell if what was found was much (if any) use.
Classic student fail, "But... But... But... I googled it! How could I have got it wrong!?"
I would add that since I moved to California I have become less and less literate. I know this to be true. Yet, most of the (Californian) people I know think I'm amazingly literate - that I speak and write well, and understand pretty much everything I hear or read correctly. What hurts the most is that the type of "high level" communication (written or oral) is about that that might be expected from the of a brain-addled 7th grader, not people with a post-graduate education.
And look what happened in that wee rant... I'm doomed!
The analysis is of research published between 2010 and 2015. It's really recent research, relatively speaking. You would expect a low replication rate for newer studies, because they haven't been put to the test yet. I would be far more surprised if older, supposedly battle-hardened research showed similar numbers.
I'd advise that is a terrible idea.
Suppose aliens came and offer each us magic boxes. You push the button on the box, you get a million dollars, or cured of your cancer, better erections, whatever, but a dozen people in a country you'd never visit die in a week.
We'd all be dead in a week.
The social policy wise choice is to kill aliens that offer boxes and any people that are suddenly rich after alien contact.
http://www.google.com/
You mean http://www.google.com? Heard that was a useful site. I still prefer Yahoo! myself.
Google doesn't make people dumber
Guns make people dumber....
Gno! I'm not dumberer because of Gookle!
In my engineering program, all exams were open book (after the first, 'weeder' semester). Did that make us all dumber? No. Because 'knowledge' is not 'intelligence'. Why spend your time memorizing tables or equations when you can spend your time learning concepts and ways of approaching critical thinking?
Google is a reference. It provides information (a.k.a. knowledge).
Intelligence means the ability to combine information with reason in order to arrive at a useful conclusion.
You're thinking of the Tnuctipun.
Keep coming back to the schools are making us dumber. Not teaching what they used to.
Personally, I have doubts that I will be able to carry on the work of Engineers born in the 1960s and 1970s. I was born in 1985.
The folks I've meet have been extremely sharp and even 30 years after college they still remember how to manually calculate any number of things.
As for me, I can say that I have, regrettably, forgotten quite a bit. Enough to say it embarrases me to call myself an Engineer.
Sure I can "google that" but, I cannot remember any number things, because I have not touched it in years. I feel like we have really overly relied upon the calculator.
Things I can't remember:
-Probably anything beyond basic calculus
-Most major calculatable equations for heat transfer
Things I can remember:
-Recent work "problems" that are worth watching out for. (Field shit.)
-Conceptual math. (For heat transfer I remember I need to figure on about conduction and convection and enthalpy. But..... I can't remember the equation right quick. Personally Heat Transfer and Thermodynamics was one of classes I really excelled in too.)
-Corrosion issues that don't look right.
-Pipe or HVAC layout that looks...wrong.
-Stress/strain basic relationships
Maybe I am just a terrible Engineer unable to reach the bar set by his past co-workers.
Geeze, all these newbs on /. never even try to answer the question themselves. Honestly (shakes head )
"Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.