Current:Home > NewsOpinion: Fewer dings, please! -Ascend Wealth Education
Opinion: Fewer dings, please!
View
Date:2025-04-21 17:34:35
I have some important information. The average American - oh, wait. <ding!> New notification. CNN: something about Taylor and Travis. Hmmm. <ding!> And our dog food is out for delivery. Whew.
Oh, I can still meet my activity goal if I take a brisk 26 minute walk!...
The average American reportedly gets about 70 smartphone notifications a day. And according to a new study from Common Sense media, the number is far higher for teenagers, whose phones ding and vibrate with hundreds or even thousands of daily alerts. This constant cascade distracts us from work, life, and each other.
"The simple ping of a notification is enough to pull our attention elsewhere," Kosta Kushlev, a behavioral scientist at Georgetown University, told us. "Even if we don't check them. This can have obvious effects on productivity and stress, but also our own well-being and of those around us."
I doubted those figures until I scrolled through my own home screen. I get push alerts from news sites, municipalities, delivery services, political figures, co-workers, scammers, and various purveyors of soap, socks, and shampoos, offering discounts and flash sales.
"Humans are not good at multitasking," Professor Kushlev reminded us. "It takes extra time and effort to switch our attention. We feel more drained and depleted. We get interrupted so many times a day that these effects can add up to meaningful decreases in our well-being and social connection."
I am grateful to get up to the minute pings on the shakeup in Congress or that the Bears have won. I'm eager for messages from our family. But I wonder why The New York Times feels it is urgent to alert me, as they did this week, about "The 6 Best Men's and Women's Cashmere Sweaters."
This is, of course, a circumstance mostly of our own creation, constructed click by click. We can choose to check notifications just a couple of times a day. But does that risk delay, real or imagined, in seeing something we really need to see? Or that would simply delight us? (Go Bears!)
The promise of instant communication has swelled into information congestion. So many urgent notifications, not many of which are truly urgent; and only a few are even interesting. So many hours spent gazing onto the light of a small screen, as if it were an oracle, searching for news, gossip, opportunity, and direction, while so often being oblivious to the world all around us.
<ding!> Hey! My cashmere sweater is here!
veryGood! (2832)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Colorado gold mine where tour guide was killed and tourists trapped ordered closed by regulators
- Booming buyouts: Average cost of firing college football coach continues to rise
- Liam Payne Death Investigation: Authorities Reveal What They Found Inside Hotel Room
- Small twin
- Paulson Adebo injury update: Saints CB breaks femur during 'Thursday Night Football' game
- One Direction's Harry Styles, Niall Horan, Louis Tomlinson & Zayn Malik Break Silence on Liam Payne Death
- Democratic incumbent and GOP challenger to hold the only debate in Nevada’s US Senate race
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Video of Phoenix police pummeling a deaf Black man with cerebral palsy sparks outcry
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Elon Musk holds his first solo event in support of Trump in the Philadelphia suburbs
- A Data Center Fight Touches on a Big Question: Who Assumes the Financial Risk for the AI Boom?
- South Carolina man gets life in prison in killing of Black transgender woman
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Devastated Harry Styles Speaks Out on Liam Payne’s Death
- SEC showdowns matching Georgia-Texas, Alabama-Tennessee lead college football Week 8 predictions
- 17 students overcome by 'banned substance' at Los Angeles middle school
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Murder trial to begin in small Indiana town in 2017 killings of two teenage girls
Meta lays off staff at WhatsApp and Instagram to align with ‘strategic goals’
Parkland shooting judge criticizes shooter’s attorneys during talk to law students
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Arizona prosecutors drop charges against deaf Black man beaten by Phoenix police
Big Tech’s energy needs mean nuclear power is getting a fresh look from electricity providers
South Carolina man gets life in prison in killing of Black transgender woman