Do Search Engines Make People Smarter?

An online survey of 371 experts and 524 Internet users reveal more than three-quarters believe the Web will make people smarter by 2020 — while21% think the Internet would have the opposite effect and could even lower the IQs of some who use it all the time. The study, released  from the Pew Internet & American Life Project and the Internet Center at Elon University looked at the Internet and its effect on human intelligence. Most respondents also said they believe the Internet will improve reading and writing by 2020.

Many of those considered experts are scientists, business leaders, consultants, writers and technology developers, such as technology scholar Nicholas Carr.

Carr’s cover story for the Atlantic Monthly — entitled “Is Google Making us Stupid?” — prompted the study. Carr, whom I had the pleasure of sitting next to during a dinner at a semiconductor conference in 2000, argued in the article that the ease of online searching, plus the distractions of Web browsing, were possibly limiting his capacity to concentrate, according to Pew. He made the assumption he’s not “thinking the way he used to” because of Google.

As the Pew study points out, search engines aren’t the problem or the solution. The Internet and search engines just enable people to explore information or hide from it. If they are motivated to learn. they will use the tool to explore topics. If they are lazy or incapable of concentrating, they will find new ways to be distracted.

About 80% of the experts agreed that “hot gadgets and applications” will emerge “out of the blue” to capture the imaginations of people in 2020.

Many surveyed said people have had little success in predicting the advent of key technologies and applications, but they do expect major advancements in mobile technology and devices.  Many innovative technologies are born from the need to spawn a new industry.

However, that the issues surrounding privacy could have been predicted. Experts participating in the Pew survey were divided on whether anonymous online activity will diminish, with nearly 40% predicting that anonymous Internet users will have their access sharply reduced.

from MediaPost

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

 
    • Dan LaRusso