首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Are your Facebook friends more interesting than those you have in real life? Has high-speed Internet made you impatient with slo
Are your Facebook friends more interesting than those you have in real life? Has high-speed Internet made you impatient with slo
admin
2014-12-11
93
问题
Are your Facebook friends more interesting than those you have in real life? Has high-speed Internet made you impatient with slow-speed children? Do you sometimes think about reaching for the fast-forward button, only to realize that life does not come with a remote control?
If you answered yes to any of those questions, exposure to technology may be slowly reshaping your personality. Some experts believe excessive use of the Internet, cellphones and other technologies can cause us to become more impatient, impulsive, forgetful and even more narcissistic.
"More and more, life is resembling the chat room," says Dr. Elias Aboujaoude, director of the Impulse Control Disorders Clinic at Stanford. "We’re paying a price in terms of our cognitive life because of this virtual lifestyle."
We do spend a lot of time with our devices, and some studies have suggested that excessive dependence on cellphones and the Internet is akin to an addiction. Web sites like NetAddiction.com offer self-assessment tests to determine if technology has become a drug. Among the questions used to identify those at risk: Do you neglect housework to spend more time online? Are you frequently checking your e-mail? Do you often lose sleep because you log in late at night? If you answered "often" or "always," technology may be taking a toll on you.
In a study to be published in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking, researchers from the University of Melbourne in Australia subjected 173 college students to tests measuring risk for problematic Internet and gambling behaviors. About 5 percent of the students showed signs of gambling problems, but 10 percent of the students posted scores high enough to put them in the at-risk category for Internet "addiction."
Technology use was clearly interfering with the students’ daily lives, but it may be going too far to call it an addiction, says Nicki Dowling, a clinical psychologist who led the study. Ms. Dowling prefers to call it "Internet dependence."
Typically, the concern about our dependence on technology is that it detracts from our time with family and friends in the real world. But psychologists have become intrigued by a more subtle and insidious effect of our online interactions. It may be that the immediacy of the Internet, the efficiency of the iPhone and the anonymity of the chat room change the core of who we are, issues that Dr. Aboujaoude explores in a book, "Virtually You: The Internet and the Fracturing of the Self," to be leleased next year.
Dr. Aboujaoude also asks whether the vast storage available in e-mail and on the Internet is preventing many of us from letting go, causing us to retain many old and unnecessary memories at the expense of making new ones. Everything is saved these days, he notes, from the meaningless e-mail sent after a work lunch to the angry online exchange with a spouse.
"If you can’t forget because all this stuff is staring at you, what does that do to your ability to lay down new memories and remember things that you should be remembering?" Dr. Aboujaoude said. "When you have 500 pictures from your vacation in your Flickr account, as opposed to five pictures that are really meaningful, does that change your ability to recall the moments that you really want to recall?"
There is also no easy way to conquer a dependence on technology. Nicholas Carr, author of the new book The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains, says that social and family responsibilities, work and other pressures influence our use of technology. "The deeper a technology is woven into the patterns of everyday life, the less choice we have about whether and how we use that technology," Mr. Carr wrote in a recent blog post on the topic.
Some experts suggest simply trying to curtail the amount of time you spend online. Set limits for how often you check e-mail or force yourself to leave your cellphone at home occasionally.
The problem is similar to an eating disorder, says Dr. Kimberly Young, a professor at St. Bonaventure University in New York who has led research on the addictive nature of online technology. Technology, like food, is an essential part of daily life, and those suffering from disordered online behavior cannot give it up entirely and instead have to learn moderation and controlled use. She suggests therapy to determine the underlying issues that set off a person’s need to use the Internet "as a way of escape."
The International Center for Media and the Public Agenda at the University of Maryland asked 200 students to refrain from using electronic media for a day. The reports from students after the study suggest that giving up technology cold turkey not only makes life logistically difficult, but also changes our ability to connect with others.
"Texting and MSN-ing my friends gives me a constant feeling of comfort," wrote one student. "When I did not have those two luxuries, I felt quite alone and secluded from my life. Although I go tq a school with thousands of students, the fact that I was not able to communicate with anyone via technology was almost unbearable."
According to Dr. Aboujaoude, all of the following contribute to changing our identity EXCEPT that
选项
A、we spend less time with people from the real world.
B、we have easy access to the Internet.
C、we do a lot of things with our iPhones.
D、we do not know who we are talking to online.
答案
A
解析
事实细节题。根据第七段倒数两句话,心理学家现在感兴趣的是网络科技所产生的一种更加细微、更加隐蔽的影响,例如Aboujaoucle博士认为,会改变我们本性的是:网络的便捷,相当于选项[B],iPhone的高效,相当于选项[C],以及聊天室的匿名,相当于选项[D]。根据第七段第一句话,对科技依赖所产生的担忧主要是它占用我们在现实生活中与家人和朋友相处的时间,但这并不是Aboujaoude的观点,所以选项[A]错误。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/KCdO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Thereisnomonthinthewholeyear,inwhichnaturewearsamorebeautifulappearancethaninthemonthofAugust.Springhasm
TheAmericanDream:MythorRealityI.Orignoftheterm:A.begantobewidelyusedin(1)______(1)______B.firstappearedina
TheAmericanDream:MythorRealityI.Orignoftheterm:A.begantobewidelyusedin(1)______(1)______B.firstappearedina
TheAmericanDream:MythorRealityI.Orignoftheterm:A.begantobewidelyusedin(1)______(1)______B.firstappearedina
WhichofthefollowingisNOTmentionedbytheauthoramongthingsthatareinheritedfromancestors?
AccordingtoEllen,theincreasingdemandforhiringisdueto
Arapidmeansoflong-distancetransportationbecameanecessityfortheUnitedStatesassettlementspreadfartherwestward.F
TheInternetprovidesanamazingforumforthefreeexchangeofideas.Giventherelativelyafewrestrictionsgoverningaccess
随机试题
各方面党组织都要对________负责,自觉向________报告重大工作和重大情况,在________统一领导下做好自身职责范围内的工作。()
大剂量硫酸镁治疗重度妊娠期高血压疾病时,最早出现的毒性反应是
木的特性为金的特性为
B公司生产乙产品,乙产品直接人工标准成本相关资料如下表所示:假定B公司实际生产乙产品10000件,实际耗用总工时25000小时,实际应付直接人工工资550000元。要求:计算乙产品标准工资率和直接人工标准成本。
下列单词中与cucumber画线部分读音相同的一项是______。
建筑布局应遵循的原则包括以下()方面。
【都护府】
小王参加了某公司招工面试,不久,他得知以下消息:(1)公司已决定,他与小陈至少录用一人。(2)公司可能不录用他。(3)公司一定录用他。(4)公司已录用小陈。其中两条消息为真,两条消息为假。如果上
在一个青黄不接的初夏,一只在农家仓库里觅食的老鼠意外地掉进一个盛得半满的米缸里。这意外使老鼠喜出望外,它先是警惕地环顾了一下四周,确定没有危险之后,接下来便是一通猛吃,吃完倒头便睡。老鼠就这样在米缸里吃了睡、睡了吃。日子在衣食无忧的休闲中过去了。
Bythetimeof1969,thereweremanyspaceexplorations.
最新回复
(
0
)