Close Menu
    What's Hot
    Industry Applications

    Shield AI and LUCAS drone program with AI Swarming Technology

    By Art RyanMay 20, 20260

    Shield AI has been selected to supply its latest Hivemind autonomy software to the U.S.…

    Acceldata Launches Autonomous Data AI Platform for Agentic AI

    May 20, 2026

    Verdane and ETERNO Scale AI Healthcare Operations in Germany

    May 20, 2026

    FANUC and Google Partner to Advance Physical AI in Robotics

    May 20, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Breaking AI News
    Wednesday, May 20
    • Home
    • Events
    • Videos
      • Machine Can Think Summit 2026
      • Step Dubai Conference 2026
    • Technology & Innovation

      Shield AI and LUCAS drone program with AI Swarming Technology

      May 20, 2026

      Acceldata Launches Autonomous Data AI Platform for Agentic AI

      May 20, 2026

      Verdane and ETERNO Scale AI Healthcare Operations in Germany

      May 20, 2026

      FANUC and Google Partner to Advance Physical AI in Robotics

      May 20, 2026

      How AI is speeding up nuclear energy deployment and cutting costs

      May 20, 2026
    • Business & Marketing

      Verdane and ETERNO Scale AI Healthcare Operations in Germany

      May 20, 2026

      Google and Blackstone $5B AI Cloud Venture to Rival CoreWeave

      May 20, 2026

      Moment Raises $78M to Revolutionize Wealth Management

      May 20, 2026

      Dubai Holding Partners With Microsoft to Accelerate AI Adoption

      May 19, 2026

      Dust Raises $40M Series B to Scale AI Enterprise Workspaces

      May 19, 2026
    • Industry Applications

      Shield AI and LUCAS drone program with AI Swarming Technology

      May 20, 2026

      Acceldata Launches Autonomous Data AI Platform for Agentic AI

      May 20, 2026

      Verdane and ETERNO Scale AI Healthcare Operations in Germany

      May 20, 2026

      FANUC and Google Partner to Advance Physical AI in Robotics

      May 20, 2026

      How AI is speeding up nuclear energy deployment and cutting costs

      May 20, 2026
    • Trends & Insights

      Google AI Studio Gets Major AI Upgrade at Google I/O 2026

      May 20, 2026

      Google I/O 2026: Sundar Pichai Announces Agentic Gemini Era

      May 20, 2026

      NextEra Dominion $67B Merger Shows AI Power Demand

      May 19, 2026

      Baidu Beats Estimates on Agentic AI Strategy

      May 19, 2026

      Ghana AI Healthcare Programme for Quality Healthcare Access

      May 18, 2026
    • AI Travel Technology News

      Thailand and Alipay+ to Accelerate AI-Driven Tourism Collaboration

      May 19, 2026

      New EU AI Border System May Bring Travel Delays for US Tourists

      May 18, 2026

      AI-Powered Apps Drive Colombia’s Birdwatching Tourism Growth

      May 18, 2026

      Japan Expands e-Gates to Ease Travel for Foreign Visitors

      May 15, 2026

      Vietnam’s $300B Digital Tech Push May Boost AI Travel by 2030

      May 15, 2026
    Breaking AI News
    Home » How to use AI without losing our minds
    Technology & Innovation

    How to use AI without losing our minds

    Art RyanBy Art RyanSeptember 1, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The recent launches of Gemini Deep Think and GPT-5 have highlighted the rapid evolution of large language models. With 67 percent of organizations worldwide now using them, you have probably experimented with them too. Perhaps you were impressed — or less so, in the case of the new ChatGPT. But you may also have noticed that you are more easily distracted, your memory is not as reliable as it was and tasks that once felt effortless now seem harder to manage.

    It is not your imagination. While artificial intelligence-powered tools can dazzle with their speed and fluency, relying on them too heavily can stupefy us, making us slower, duller and less able to think for ourselves. Four trends highlighted by ongoing research stand out.

    Digital distraction is reducing our ability to focus and concentrate. Over the last two decades, smartphones and other devices have increasingly undermined our ability to sustain attention, make decisions and complete tasks, distracting us with constant notifications and luring us into endless scrolling. The urge to check our phones, reinforced by the small reward the brain registers with every message or update, is as addictive as it is debilitating. Studies show that these interruptions, combined with the instant gratification of scrolling, make it harder to focus on demanding, long-term tasks.

    Ever easier-to-access information causes memory erosion, which means less capacity to retain and organize information when making decisions. Researchers began looking at the “Google effect” some time ago, highlighting the adverse impact on memory of growing reliance on smartphones. By contrast, earlier generations had to memorize telephone numbers, poetry and even the periodic table.

    Declining ability to reason well and construct a good argument is the most recent effect of AI, as more people delegate their thinking to ChatGPT, Gemini or DeepSeek. Studies show that this “cognitive offloading” impedes our ability to think clearly, recognize logical connections and spot flawed arguments. It is the mental equivalent of outsourcing your exercise routine — you may conserve energy in the short term but, over time, your own strength diminishes.

    In the pre-large language model era, researchers had to search the internet — or, earlier, the library — and carefully evaluate each new source. Was it useful? How did it compare to other sources? Could ideas be combined or tested against one another? The research process trained the mind to remember, apply, analyze and synthesize. Without that work, those abilities inevitably weaken.

    No longer scrutinizing, debating and challenging ideas leads to duller minds. “Cognitive friction” is vital for sharpening brainpower. The sycophancy of large language models, which are trained to be pleasing and rely on user approval, dulls our thinking. There is also a dark side to sycophancy, such as when AI models agree with incorrect self-diagnoses or make harmful suggestions. 

    Relying on AI-powered tools too heavily can stupefy us, making us slower, duller and less able to think for ourselves.

    Ngaire Woods

    Alarmingly, a recent study shows that the more users insist on falsehoods, the more mainstream models echo them. OpenAI is now working to curb sycophancy by (in the words of ChatGPT itself) “encouraging honesty, constructive disagreement and independent thinking instead of automatic praise or deference.” The problem is that friction makes users uncomfortable, even though that tension is precisely what drives personal growth.

    Tech companies, workplaces, educational institutions and individuals must take up the challenge of ensuring that AI strengthens human capacity. For me, sitting in a university, the challenge is immediate. In 2023, one-third of US college students reported using ChatGPT for coursework; by 2024, another survey found that 86 percent of students across 16 countries relied on AI in their studies.

    With an AI-powered device always within reach, the question we must have a convincing answer to is: why struggle to remember things, reason or piece together an argument when a large language model will do it for you? The answer is that if you do not train your brain to remember, to reason and to welcome cognitive friction, the result will be an erosion of the capacity for learning, reasoning, creativity, metacognition and critical thinking.

    Some solutions have a long history. Perhaps it is time to bring back memorization as a form of brain training. As a simple exercise, you can try to teach your favorite large language model something you just learned: explaining new material to someone else — even an AI assistant — helps knowledge stick.

    Reducing distraction can include creating spaces, classes and time without constant recourse to devices. In the UK, roughly 90 percent of schools have banned smartphones during lessons. Universities and workplaces could create more device-free environments for reading, reflection and debate. By embracing problem-based learning and simulations, they can help students and colleagues tackle complex, open-ended problems using (and honing) judgment and creativity.

    The choice we face is whether to surrender our minds to AI or to treat large language models as sparring partners that enable us to sharpen our cognitive abilities. The data revolution has entered a new phase and only by training our minds can we keep up.

    • Ngaire Woods is Dean of the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford.

    Source: https://www.arabnews.com/
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Art Ryan

    Related Posts

    Shield AI and LUCAS drone program with AI Swarming Technology

    May 20, 2026

    Acceldata Launches Autonomous Data AI Platform for Agentic AI

    May 20, 2026

    Verdane and ETERNO Scale AI Healthcare Operations in Germany

    May 20, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Latest News

    Shield AI and LUCAS drone program with AI Swarming Technology

    May 20, 2026

    Acceldata Launches Autonomous Data AI Platform for Agentic AI

    May 20, 2026

    Verdane and ETERNO Scale AI Healthcare Operations in Germany

    May 20, 2026

    FANUC and Google Partner to Advance Physical AI in Robotics

    May 20, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Vimeo WhatsApp TikTok Instagram LinkedIn YouTube Spotify Reddit Snapchat Threads

    AI University

    • Global Universities
    • Universities in Africa
    • Universities in Asia
    • Universities in Europe
    • Universities in Latin America
    • Universities in Middle East
    • Universities in North America
    • Universities in Oceania

    AI Tools & Apps Directory

    • AI Productivity Tools
    • AI Coding Tools
    • AI Voice Tools
    • AI Video Tools
    • AI Image Generators
    • AI Writing Tools

    Info

    • Home
    • About Us
    • AI Organizations & Associations
    • Contact Us
    • Cookie Policy
    • Copyright Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Editorial Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2026 Breaking AI News.
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Sign Up

    Want to stay ahead In Artificial Intelligence?

     Sign up now and get exclusive breaking AI news and special updates—FREE!