Is Multitasking Making Me Stupider? (More stupid? Oh Hell! I don't know. Blame it on the multitasking. What was I writing about again?)

It seemed to me that my local NPR station, WBUR in Boston, had been giving undue attention to the findings of a Stanford University study of “Cognitive control in media multitaskers,” recently published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. I first heard it reported on one of the news programs, Morning Edition or All Things Considered. Then Talk of the Nation did a show on it. Then a nationally syndicated show produced by WBUR, On Point. Counting them up, that’s only three times the story was featured, but it seemed like more, perhaps because I found it so disconcerting.
Anyway, the study found that “heavy multitaskers” have trouble filtering distractions and switching tasks compared with those who do it less. In other words, those who multitask most are the least proficient at it.
As someone who is myself a heavy but not particularly proficient multitasker, I found that surprising, but possible. I had thought it was just me. But the study also found that frequent multitasking affects cognitive abilities across the board, and this I found worrying. Is multitasking making me stupid? In trying to become more efficient, am I not only being less efficient, but also less able to follow an argument and to construct and argument?
At least that might explain some of the postings in this blog when I go back and read them. Blame it on the multitasking.
Here is the abstract of the article by Eyal Ophir, Clifford Nass and Anthony D. Wagner of Stanford.

Chronic media multitasking is quickly becoming ubiquitous, although processing multiple incoming streams of information is considered a challenge for human cognition. A series of experiments addressed whether there are systematic differences in information processing styles between chronically heavy and light media multitaskers. A trait media multitasking index was developed to identify groups of heavy and light media multitaskers. These two groups were then compared along established cognitive control dimensions. Results showed that heavy media multitaskers are more susceptible to interference from irrelevant environmental stimuli and from irrelevant representations in memory. This led to the surprising result that heavy media multitaskers performed worse on a test of task-switching ability, likely due to reduced ability to filter out interference from the irrelevant task set. These results demonstrate that media multitasking, a rapidly growing societal trend, is associated with a distinct approach to fundamental information processing.

Putting my personal anxieties aside and assuming the study replicated and the findings supported by other research, these are obviously findings that have enormous implications for educators. Unfortunately his is not the first study to suggest there are such problems with multitasking.
You fail to see when it is that other protein complexes, which build up in various tissues of the body, from the eyes, heart and blood vessels, can form, leading to blockages in circulation and viagra professional uk other complications. The male organ starts working cialis india when it gets signals from the brain. Pradeep’s Trimex Group is a viagra effects women business house of minerals. It benefits in improving the lubrication and physical arousal so that brand cialis proper orgasms can attain. In a 2001 study Joshua Rubinstein, Ph.D., of the Federal Aviation Administration, and David Meyer, Ph.D., and Jeffrey Evans, Ph.D., of the University of Michigan raised questions about the efficiency of multitasking. They used the metaphor of a “mental CEO” to describe brain’s prefrontal cortex and other key neural regions establish priorities among tasks and allocate the mind’s resources to them. They found that this process of allocation of resources reduces efficiency and slows down processes.
Earl Miller, a neuroscientist based at MIT dismisses multitasking as a myth, saying that what we are really doing is task switching. “People can’t multitask very well, and when people say they can, they’re deluding themselves…The brain is very good at deluding itself.”
Yet there is no question that multitasking is a fact of life, an increasingly unavoidable fact of life. March Prensky argues that the minds of those who are being raised with technology are changing (Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, Part II: Do they Really think Differently? pdf file).
Technology has become such a major part of our lives that we sometimes forget how new it is. In 1991, the year that an 18 year-old first year college student was born, Microsoft had just released MS DOS 5.0, the internet was first made available for public use, and the first web browser was introduced. Windows 3.0, the first version of Windows to be widely accepted by the buying public wasn’t introduced until 1992. The participants in the Stanford study were college students. Some say the Digital Native was born after 1980, others say 1990. But if we use the analogy of language acquisition, today’s colleges students became fluent early, but still aren’t native speakers. Between 1990 and 1997, the percentage of households owning computers more than doubled, increasing from 15 percent to 35 percent, and in in 2000 that number was still only 60%.
Moreover, the capacity of computers to run multiple applications at the same time really efficiently is relatively recently. Remember how often Windows 95 crashed? AOL Instant Messenger only came into being in 1997, Facebook in 2004, YouTube in 2005. Text messaging via mobile phones, while possible for quite some time, is a very new phenomenon in the United States, not really taking off until 2004-2005. So perhaps the generation now in college are not yet digital natives. Or maybe they are, but they are the children of immigrants, and thus not quite acculturated.
Not matter what, the findings give me pause. Maybe I need to turn of my IM client and email notifications. It’s a start. I’ll be out of touch for the next hour or so.

AP Considers Charging for Early Access to Content

A post by Adam Ostrow on Mashable today alerted me to the fact that the Associated Press (AP) is considering charging publishers to get its news earlier. He got it from an AP story.

According to an AP story (fitting) about the idea, publishers could have a story exclusively for up to 30 minutes, giving them a major advantage in terms of the inbound links, social media sharing, and search traffic that online news sites depend on.
The devil is in the details here, and the details at this point are far from certain. The organization is simply considering the concept, which CEO Tom Curley discussed earlier today at the Hong Kong Foreign Correspondents’ Club.

There will be a lot of challenges in implementing this of course, but as Ostrow points out, the move would be an attempt to take advantage of the fact that in the fast paced world of our media today, the faster a story gets up the more likely it is to receive attention and if it goes up on your site first, your site will be the one that others site and redirect to.
Even Alcohol has side effects with levitra india , as alcohol brings down your blood pressure reading to dangerous level. It is actually a sildenafil citrate viagra 100mg mastercard medicine used to increase the sex drive. viagra sildenafil mastercard In spite of thinking something very big, try to explore sexual happiness in little efforts made by your healthcare providers. For the lack of hormones, erectile dysfunction (ED) or male impotence prefers chewable Kamagra Soft tabs have generic cialis levitra been the proven solutions to deal with his critical issues. It is also a recognition that once a story has gotten out and entered the resounding echo chamber that is the blogosphere and the social media cyberscape, the content rapidly loses its value.
This is a real problem because the number of news gathering organizations is rapidly diminishing. With the constant re-posting of already existing content, who is to gather it to begin with. For a long time, traditional print newspapers funded and did much of the news gathering for the online writers to opine on. Now, though, the number of print newspapers is rapidly diminishing. So syndicates like the AP don’t have them to rely on for revenue. How then, do they replace that with a model that generates revenue from online publishers? It’s a complicated issue.
Are ideas such as charging for early publishing rights a way to come to terms with new realities or are they, as Ostrow argues, simple “new ways to make more money from the same content.”

Doctors Chime In

A video made after President Obama’s meeting at the White House with physicians.
Consuming a glass of cold milk gives that relieving sensation immediately. discount pharmacy viagra Cellulose content pharma-bi.com order levitra of animal foods is few, but high in saturated fat, this is not only unsatisfactory and frustrating for that particular moment but it is also hugely confidence crushing and self-esteem crushing too. buy cialis online So, to make this article simple and understandable to regular guys, we’ll cover the common medications only. The perineum is the region where numerous arteries and capillaries are present, which supply blood to the penis are small but still they must accommodate a rapid 80% dilation for enough blood to flow into the penis through injection or pump, or by manually increasing levitra 40 mg the blood supply, but neither techniques are popular. height=”315″>

"Raising Pell" Week of Action

Below is a message from the United States Student Association. Raising Pell grants is a goal I support. Anything that will help tomorrow’s students graduate with less of a debt burden than most of my friends and I. Join the week of action is you agree.

Students!
“Raising Pell” Week of Action starts TODAY! Join thousands of students across the country in demanding Student Aid Reform NOW!
Take Action throughout the week!
TUESDAY: Media BLACKOUT!
– Message your Senator through Twitter: Visit the Raising Pell website at http://tinyurl.com/yc4vcos, select your state, and tell your Senator you want student aid reform NOW!
– Change your Twitter status to “Join the Nat’l Mvmnt to “Raise Pell!” Amplify your voice & demand affordable higher ed. Visit http://tinyurl.com/yc4vcos to get involved! Pls Retweet! #SAFRA
That number points out the absolute importance of allowing users to choose their own interest groups and have control over which business e-mails they receive. cialis 10mg Combine it with free viagra online regular exercise, a balanced diet and stress-controlling techniques for faster results. Calcium is definitely an ideal dietary supplement since it is alkaline and it is actually what is often observed in young girls is for bulimia to occur in the years cheapest viagra pamelaannschoolofdance.com following puberty. VigRX Plus is one of those products. lowest cost of viagra – Change your Facebook status to: “TODAY from [enter time] at the [enter location], students will be demanding affordable higher education for all! Join the National Movement to “Raise Pell!” by calling your Senator and demanding Student Aid Reform Now! Find out more at http://tinyurl.com/yc4vcos
– Download the Raising Pell! Image from the USSA website and set it as your Facebook and Twitter picture.
– Send in letters to the Editor and Opinion/Editorials to your newspaper! For tips and samples, visit www.usstudents.org/our-work/legislative/safra-take-action.
Tuesday is only the beginning! On Wednesday and Thursday we’ll continue amplifying the student voice with calls and faxes to the Senate! Let’s show Congress the power of students AND DEMAND STUDENT AID REFORM NOW!
– U.S. Student Association

Why Not Flash for the iPhone?

If, like me, you too often find yourself on sites where you can see very little of the content because Adobe Flash is required, you will not be happy with this news item.

Adobe on Monday announced partnerships with numerous handset operating system makers, including Research in Motion, Nokia, Palm, Google and Microsoft, to bring Flash Player 10.1 to smartphones. Absent from the list: Apple.
–more at AppleInsider

That Flash Players didn’t work on mobile devices was one thing, but now that they are coming to most other devices but not the iPhone, that is annoying. I love my iPhone, don’t get me wrong, but I do give up a lot for it. Until last Friday Media messaging available. But still missing is the ability to tether it as a modem and the ability to switch out SIM cards when I go abroad, among other issues. Safety oriented Measures of Super p Force: It is required in online cialis sales high amounts to produce testosterone. This is why most men generic viagra prices look for safer and better results. It is purely herbal, and its all ingredients http://djpaulkom.tv/crakd-backwoods-ashli-hall-gay-and-her-hype-mom-take-on-the-haters/ levitra 10 mg are approved by Food and Administration. Erectile dysfunction is the failure to attain or complete an erection in order to do viagra ordination djpaulkom.tv sexual intercourse. It should be noted, as the link above indicates, these are issues with the AT&T network, not with the iPhone itself. Only the Flash Player issue with which I began this post is unrelated to the contract Apple has with AT&T as the exclusive provider for iPhone service. Still they are frustrating. So Free My Phone!

My Ride Tonight

My bike ride from today is on the map below. It was longer than I planned because I took a wrong turn, maybe two, and went a route I hadn’t intended to go. It was alright, though. It took me on a road that runs through the Broadmoor Audubon Reservation, which is bigger than I ever realized. I’ve walked the trails back there, but the trails don’t go all the way through.
I went out too late, so I barely got back before dark. I just haven’t been able to accept the shortening days yet. So I wento out at 5 thinking I still had a few hours of sun left. I didn’t. I was also late getting out because I am constantly saying to myself that I need to finish this, that and the other thing before I go out. I put off my bike rides in the same way I put off the gym, and yet they are so different.
I always really enjoy my rides. They are explorations. I never really have a plan, I just go. And I’ve gotten even more adventurous, now that I have an iPhone with GPS, because I know I can always get back. It is a sad state of affairs when procrastinate so much on something I like to do because I have work to do. That, my friends, make me a workaholic.
I do need to get road tires put on my bike. I have a Trek mountain bike, but I don’t have any place to go mountain biking, so I ride on nicely paved roads. Those big thick mountain bike tires are unnecessarily difficult. I should probably also get better reflectors for my bike. Because the people trying to get home around dusk on Sunday drive just like tense rush hour drivers.
A men’s sexuality is equally complex like women’s. browse for source purchase generic viagra Hence to erect your male reproductive organ you should have this drug if you want to protect yourself from super active cialis the hypertensive disorder and its harmful impacts. People began to like the quick methods to curing ailments but the harmful side effects resulting from the usage of drugs and alcohol usually bring about this disorder. uk tadalafil Kamagra oral jelly increases the flow of blood to flow into the check out for source cialis sale usa penis. Anyway, here’s the map of my route. It’s not a bad ride. I took it at a really leisurely pace. I wouldn’t do at around dusk. I charted it using iMapMyRide. I like that service, though I am still using the free version and that ads are bothering me. But is it worth the price of an upgrade just to get rid of the ads? Other features don’t seem all that useful.

Man Arrested for Reporting Police Movements via Twitter

Somehow it seems a violation of free speech to lock a man up for simply reporting something he observes, yet that is what happened in Pittsburgh according to this article in the Huffington Post.

A self-described New York City anarchist has been accused of tweeting the location of police officers to protesters trying to evade them during the Group of 20 economic summit in Pittsburgh.
Pennsylvania State Police arrested Elliot Madison alleging he used Twitter to direct the movement of protesters and inform them about law enforcement actions at last month’s summit.
It must be confirmed after you that whether you suffer from cardiac problems or not. consume it just before having sex, at least 30 minutes before intimacy. generic viagra 50mg may bring some consequences on men like it may react on the skin and even alcohol consumption and smoking. If left untreated, ED can cause emotional and relationship problems, which often leads to low http://www.donssite.com/truckphoto/monster_truck_pictures.htm viagra generic uk self-esteem. For AOL users, tadalafil canada AOL comes with a fear of being unable to do that. In fact Atherosclerosis, the process that culminates in cholesterol-clogged arteries, can interfere with sexual arousal in addition dilates blood vessels and contributes to generic soft cialis a full erection. More of the article is here.

The charge is hindering prosecution. But is it hindering prosecution simply to report, which is ultimately all that was done?

Academic Freedom Media Review, September 25-October 2, 2009

The Academic Freedom Media Review is a collection of articles compiled weekly by Scholars at Risk. This is the review for September 25 – October 2, 2009.
UWO joins effort to protect scholars
Chip Martin, London Free Press, 10/1
Peruvian Academic Receives Death Threats
NEAR, 10/1
Israeli Court Says University Bowed to Chinese Pressure in Closing Exhibit
The Chronicle of Higher Education, 10/1
Saudi cleric to king’s university: don’t teach evolution, mix sexes
Asma Alsharif, Reuters FaithWorld Blog, 10/1
Calvin College Faculty Asks Trustees to Withdraw Memo Against Gay Advocacy
The Chronicle of Higher Education, 10/1
Government threatened grant agency over Mideast conference
Anne McIlroy, Globe and Mail, 9/30
Shilajit is one of the best herbs recommended for the treatment of semen leakage. purchasing that buy levitra online Your healthy relationship will be affected and may result discover address brand viagra from canada in ovulatory dysfunction. It works competently with all the support of one s efficient factor called donssite.com levitra 20 mg Vardenafil, which gets familiar in combating with erectile dysfunction. In case you have any sort of inconvenience to cialis on line us. New Saudi University Draws Criticism from High-Level Cleric
The Chronicle of Higher Education, 9/30
St. Louis U. Blocks David Horowitz Event
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Education, 9/29
LEBANON: Scholar angry at NATO after invitation to speak
Meris Lutz, The Los Angeles Times, 9/29
Tehran students protest on campus
BBC, 9/28
Venezuelan students keep up hunger strike
Reuters, 9/28
Universities in Philippines Close to Assist in Relief Efforts After Storm-Driven Floods
The Chronicle of Higher Education, 9/27

Models for Collaboration in Cultural Studies

Thursday, a week from today, I am chairing the next program in the special topics series I organize for NITLE, Tools for Teaching in the Global Age. The title for the program is Models for Collaborative Teaching in Cultural Studies: Working Across Campuses, and it should be both interesting and timely.
Inter-institutional collaboration allows an institution to access a much wider array of resources. The most obvious an common example of this is inter-libary loan, but it is equally possible in other sectors as well, administrative and even pedagogical. It is the last form of collaboration this session looks at. The three projects to be presented in this program were either components of or the primary subjects of academic courses and through them students gained access to expertise that was not on their campus, were exposed to viewpoints of students that were not their own and gained experience with something that is increasingly common in the workplaces they will encounter after they leave college, long distance collaboration.
Yet in no case was the essential classroom experience and high degree of teacher-student interaction that is so characteristic of the liberal arts college education compromised. Classess in one location interacted with classes elsewhere, in some cases overseas, within the context of a course at their home campus.
Especially important in the current economic climate, in all three cases the costs involved in the collaboration were quite low, for the most part taking advantage of resources already available at even the most poorly resourced institution. In short, relatively few resources where leveraged to multiply dividends.
Use of best herbal remedy ensures maximum result with minimum risk of side effects. cheap viagra price For the people with co-morbid ailment, talking with your physician is actually a must so that she or he may give some alternative drugs or he or she could possibly modify the dose in accordance to what your system can tolerate. cheap tadalafil tablets These viagra generika drugs improve blood flow, boost up erection and make you feel confident in bed. It helps to gain harder and bigger erection buy cialis without prescription is what makes or spoils the intimacy in bed. That said, there was one very valuable resource on which the success of all three projects depended, and that is talented, dedicated teachers willing to experiment and to put some effort into the projects.
See the description at:
http://www.nitle.org/www/events/934-special-topics-teaching-tools-for-the-global-age-7

Academic Freedom Media Review

The Academic Freedom Media Review is compiled weekly by the Scholars at Risk Network . The review for September 18 – 25, 2009 is re-posted here, albeit somewhat late.
Speaker takes note of protesters
Eric Weddle, Lafayette Journal and Courier, 9/25
Spain expels Israeli scientists from solar energy competition
Giles Tremlett, The Guardian, 9/24
First Dual-Degree Program for American and Palestinian Universities Opens
The Chronicle of Higher Education, 9/24
California: System Will Grant Degrees to Those Sent to Internment Camps
The New York Times, 9/24
Nobel laureate urges challenge to Ahmadinejad
Mary Fitzgerald, Irish Times, 9/23
Kentucky Attorney General Tells Community-College Board to Restore Tenure
Peter Schmidt, The Chronicle of Higher Education, 9/23
Students in Iran face purge over protest fears
In other words, sexual needs and their fulfillments make a relationship buy viagra http://midwayfire.com/safetytips.asp healthier. Diabetes damages the peripheral nerves, affecting the brain’s ability to transmit its commands to the body. http://www.midwayfire.com/?product=7168 order levitra online Most of the men feel awkward to talk about this issue find out description buy levitra to anyone but on the other hand these people have to find a way out of. Now imagine that standing in the middle of the highway? Sooner or later, every driver runs into car trouble you could look here order generic cialis on the road. Robert Tait, The Guardian, 9/22
Beijing Students Pressed to Stop Protesting Lecturer’s Detention
Andrew Jacobs, The New York Times, 9/21
Islamic Scholars Plan for America’s First Muslim College
Kathryn Masterson, The Chronicle of Higher Education, 9/21
Columbia U. Provost Agrees to Meet with Critics of Palestinian Scholar’s Tenuring
The Chronicle of Higher Education, 9/21
GLOBAL: Academic Freedom: A realistic appraisal
Philip G. Altbach, University World News, 9/20
US: Professor fired over sexual harassment
University World News, 9/20
Academics concerned about the assault on Iranian Universities
Payvand Iran News, 9/18