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THE IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY ON THE BRAIN RISK MANAGEMENT, LEADERSHIP & CREATIVITY

Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

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Page 1: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

THE IMPACT OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY ON THE BRAIN

RISK MANAGEMENT, LEADERSHIP& CREATIVITY

Page 2: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Risk-Management

Leadership

Creativity

Page 3: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

(1) The Environment is Key

Page 4: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
Page 5: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Developing a Mind…

Newborn 3 months 15 months 2 years

Page 6: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
Page 7: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

‘Thinking is… Movement Confined to the Brain’

Page 8: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

An ‘Enriched’ Environment…

Page 9: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Effects of an ‘Enriched’ Environment

Standard ‘Enriched’

Page 10: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Connections Give Ever Deeper MEANING over Time…

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Page 13: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

The Biological Basis of the MindIs the Personalisation of the Brain

Through Unique Dynamic ConfigurationsOf Neuronal Connections, Driven by

unique Experiences

Page 14: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

(2) The 21st Century Environment is Unprecedented

http://www.itv.com/news/update/2014-08-07/brits-spend-more-time-using-technology-than-sleeping/

Page 15: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
Page 16: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

The Independent, 7th August 2014

Page 17: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Freedom…

Page 18: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

(3) The Brain Will Be Changing Correspondingly in New Ways

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“Even so, mankind will suffer badly from the disease of boredom, a disease spreading more widely each year

and growing in intensity. This will have serious mental, emotional and sociological consequences, and I dare

say that psychiatry will be far and away the most important medical specialty in 2014. The lucky few who can be involved in creative work of any sort will be the true elite of mankind, for they alone will do more than

serve a machine.”

Isaac Asimov, 1964

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Risk-Management

Page 21: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
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136 Papers

DesensitisationIncreased arousal

Aggressive cognitionAggressive behaviour

381 Independent Tests130,296 Participants

Research Article Violent video game effects on aggression, empathy, and prosocial behavior in

Eastern and Western countries: A meta-analytic review.Anderson, Craig A.; Shibuya, Akiko; Ihori, Nobuko; Swing, Edward L.; Bushman, Brad J.; Sakamoto, Akira; Rothstein, Hannah R.;

Saleem, Muniba

How to cite: Anderson, Craig A.; Shibuya, Akiko; Ihori, Nobuko; Swing, Edward L.; Bushman, Brad J.; Sakamoto, Akira; Rothstein, Hannah R.; Saleem, Muniba,. Psychological Bulletin, Vol 136(2), Mar 2010, 151-173

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Kelly CR, Grinband J, Hirsch J (2007) PLoS ONE 2(12): e1268. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0001268

Repeated Exposure to Media Violence Is Associated with Diminished Response in

an Inhibitory Frontolimbic Network.

Page 25: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
Page 26: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Research Article Video game playing, attention problems, and impulsiveness:

Evidence of bi-directional causalityDouglas A. Gentile, Edward L. Swing, Choon Guan Lim, and Angeline Khoo

How to cite: Gentile, D. A., Swing, E. L., Lim, C. G., & Khoo, A. (2012). Video game playing, attention problems, and impulsiveness: Evidence of bi-directional causality. Psychology of Popular Media Culture, 1, 62-70.

Research Article Television and Video Game Exposure and the Development of

Attention ProblemsEdward L. Swing, Douglas A. Gentile, Craig A. Anderson, David A. Walsh

How to cite: Edward L. Swing, Douglas A. Gentile, Craig A. Anderson, David A. Walsh 2010, Television and Video Game Exposure and the Development of Attention Problems Pediatrics Vol. 126 No. 2 pp. 214 -221 (doi: 10.1542/peds.2009-1508.)

Video Games and Attention

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THE NEURAL BASIS OF

VIDEO GAMING

Kuhn, S. et al., Translational Psychiatry

(2011)53, 1-5

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Arousal Addiction RewardReward

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‘Meaningless’Prefrontal under-function?

• Strong feelings• Sensory• Here-and-now• External environment

dominates• Little ‘meaning’• Reduced sense of self• No time-space• Infants and children• More

‘Meaningful’Prefrontal activation?

• Thinking dominates• Cognitive• Past / present / future• Internal perceptions

dominate• Personalised ‘meaning’• Strong sense of self• Clear time-space reference• Older children and adults• Less

Two Basic Modes for the Human Brain

Page 32: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Having a sensational time…Having a sensational time…

Letting yourself go…

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Research Article Inverse Association Between BMI and Prefrontal Metabolic Activity In

Healthy AdultsVolkow ND, Wang GJ, Telang F, Fowler JS, Goldstein RZ, Alia-Klein N, Logan J, Wong C,

Thanos PK, Ma Y, Pradhan K.

How to cite: Obesity (2009) Inverse Association Between BMI and Prefrontal Metabolic Activity In Healthy Adults. (1):60-5. doi: 10.1038/oby.2008.469. Epub 2008 Oct 23.

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Page 35: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Research Article Decision-Making in Obesity: A Study using the Gambling

Pignatti R, Bertella L, Albani G, Mauro A, Molinari E, Semenza C.

How to cite: Eat Weight Disord. (2006) Decision-Making in Obesity: A Study using the Gambling11(3):126-32

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WithoutSchizophrenia

WithSchizophrenia

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Childhood and Schizophrenia Similarities

Easily distracted

Short attention span

Inability to interpret proverbs

Under-functioning Prefrontal Cortex

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A Common Factor: The Press of the Senses?

Page 39: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

‘Meaningless’Prefrontal under-function?

• Strong feelings• Sensory• Here-and-now• External environment

dominates• Little ‘meaning’• Reduced sense of self• No time-space• Infants and children• More

‘Meaningful’Prefrontal activation?

• Thinking dominates• Cognitive• Past / present / future• Internal perceptions

dominate• Personalised ‘meaning’• Strong sense of self• Clear time-space reference• Older children and adults• Less

Two Basic Modes for the Human Brain

Page 40: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

A CONTINUOUS

CYCLE?

(2) High arousal, high levels of

dopamine release

(6) Conditions of childhood,

schizophrenia, obesity (5) Dopamine causes PFC

hypo-function

(4) Dopamine released

(3) Reward seeking

addictive behaviour

(7) Drive: sensation over

cognition

(8) Greater appeal of a

screen environment?

(1) Intense stimulation of screen: fast

response

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Page 42: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

Risk-Management

Leadership

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Words: 10% of total impact Eye contact Body languageVoice(tone/rate/volume)Pheromones ?Physical contact ?

Communications in Three Dimensions

Page 45: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
Page 46: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

• A link between atypical brain wave responses in problematic facerecognition, characteristic of autism, and also of heavy internet users (He etal., 2011)

• A link between autistic spectrum disorders and an under-functioningprefrontal cortex, indicative of a more literal take on the world (Amodio &Frith 2006)

• A link between early screen experiences and later development of autism(Waldman et al., 2006)

• A link between autistic conditions and an appeal of screen technologies(Finkenauer et al., 2012).

• A link between autistic spectrum disorder and compulsive video game use(Mazurek & Engelhardt 2013)

A Link Between Autistic Type Behaviour and the Screen?

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Page 48: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
Page 49: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

History of Blogging…1999: So I just have to tell someone about this thing my cat did today…

2004: OMG! Cat pictures!

2005: Moving cat pictures!

2007:1:00pm. My cat just sneezed!1:02pm. Cat sneezed again!1:04pm. Cat hasn’t sneezed recently. Getting worried.

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• High IQ• Efficient information

processing• Short attention span• Icons not ideas• Sensation at premium• Risk taker• Low empathy• Need for constant feedback• Weak sense identity• Low grade aggression

The Workforce of the Future?

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From Management to Leadership…

HAVING A VISION!

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Promoting Individual Fulfilment

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Risk-Management

Leadership

Creativity

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Eric Schmidt (Chairman, Google)

‘I worry that the level of interrupt, the sort of overwhelming rapidity of

information…is in fact affecting cognition. It is affecting deeper thinking. I still believe that

sitting down and reading a book is the best way to really learn something. And I worry that we’re

losing that…’

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Princess Marya…

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From INFORMATION to KNOWLEDGE

1) Isolated Fact2) Relate to other facts = 3) Significance4) Place facts in wider, conceptual framework = 5) Understanding

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What is ‘Understanding’?

Page 63: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

‘From the moment we become aware of others, we demand to be told stories that allow us to make sense of the world, to

inhabit the mind of someone else. In old age we tell stories to make small museums of memory. It matters not whether the

stories are true or imaginary.

The narrative, whether oral or written, is a staple of every culture the world over. But stories demand time and concentration; the narrative does not simply transmit

information, but invites the reader or listener to witness the unfolding of events’..

Ben Macintyre

Page 64: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

From KNOWLEDGE to NEW THINKING

1) Isolated Fact2) Relate to other facts = 3) Significance4) Place facts in wider, conceptual framework = 5) Understanding6) Make unprecedented connections = 7) New significance and understanding =8) Creativity!

Page 65: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

(I) Premium on de-constructing/ challenging dogma

The 3 Steps to Creativity

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Page 67: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

(I) Premium on de-constructing/ challenging dogma(II) Unusual associations

The 3 Steps to Creativity

Page 68: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain
Page 69: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

(I) Premium on de-constructing (II) Unusual associationsBUT ALSO(III) These new associations activate more extensive

connections (‘have a meaning’).

The 3 Steps to Creativity

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Page 71: Susan Greenfield - 2015 AICD Conference - The Impact of Digital Technology on the Brain

“We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars…”

Oscar Wilde

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Mind Change: Global,

Controversial,Unprecedented,Multifaceted…

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