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Nick Carmody JD, MS Psych's avatar

I'm a psychotherapist, and I work with kids who struggle with electronic device addiction. We have spent a lot of time talking about device dependency/addiction, the neuropsychology of addiction (dopamine), analogizing it to other addictions for perspective, distinguishing it from other addictions to show how difficult it is to manage (because unlike an alcoholic, we can't completely abstain from electronics in modern society so it's like telling an alcoholic that he not only CAN have several drinks each day, but he/she MUST have several drinks each day........and just don't overdo it. Most alcoholics would go on a bender)....and to create awareness that their dependency/addiction to electronics is not a character flaw and does not make them a bad person (because this is how they internalize their addiction). From an evolutionary standpoint, tens of thousands of years of our neuropsychology has not and cannot evolve as fast as technology has in mere decades. Especially for kids whose prefrontal cortexes are still developing until around age 25. Unlike adults/the older generation who still struggle with device addiction post-development, the addiction is literally being wired into the brain development of kids/the younger generation. And worse, many of the algorithms are specifically designed to target the reward system (dopamine) of the brain to keep people on the site for as long as possible to increase advertising revenue. The kids literally have no chance against a system specifically designed by teams of engineers with knowledge of behavioral psychology to override executive functioning. I discuss this with my clients/parents in the context of "Youtube shorts" and TikTok videos, and the dopamine effect, which is related to "anticipation" and intermittent reinforcement......where it is anticipated the next 30/60 second video will be the coolest/funniest video they have ever seen, and if it's not, then the next will be.... and if it's not then the next will, etc. This is the same process that makes slot machines addictive for gamblers.

I have also thoroughly analyzed the role of dopamine/addiction in our political discourse, and the effect it has on tribalism, confirmation bias, and conspiracy theory susceptibility. This article is an overview of everything I've written about the topic, and even contemplates the effect whether GLP-1 agonist drugs (Ozempic) might mitigate toxic political "addictions":

https://www.patreon.com/posts/92826194

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Tony S (UK)'s avatar

Up pops this substack from Brian and I stop coding to read it – so he’s distracted me (again) – but his articles are always in the discovery quadrant and that’s a very good thing (and the coding was getting intricate at the time but it’s creative). I enjoy reading his articles – he nails it in this one.

A long long time ago I got a degree in marketing and have distrusted advertising ever since. At a young age it was immediately apparent that I would be a diabolical marketeer and by accident I discovered computing and have spent my life in IT (in the productivity/efficiency quadrant I guess). I started my career before the internet and the PC – at the time a dozen colleagues were clattering away on their mechanical typewriters in the typing pool and I showed them how I used our IBM mainframe to write my reports on its word processor (a text editor in those days). Yes I am old. But here’s the thing, I am driven to create (build) things – always have been - I went to a school that wired me this way. I have never gamed and hardly ever used social media apps because they don’t interest me. For more than a decade, at the end of my career, I was director of IT at a leading global cyber security business, so I knew much about the mechanics of web applications, but colleagues were often taken aback by how little I understood about what, for example, Twitter was actually for (it was embarrassing frankly). Would it all have been different if I had started 20 years later and begun a device addiction like many kids and fuzzed my brain ? Probably. The most valuable use I make of the internet is to find out about things that make me curious. Back to the coding.

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