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Browsing The Internet Makes You Feel Smarter

Searching the internet for information may make people feel smarter than they actually are, but this inflated sense of personal knowledge may have negative effects, scientists say.

The internet is a playground as well as powerful, with a wealth of knowledge ready and waiting for people to look up and amaze their friends with, it certainly isn’t slowing down. We are not satisfied with basic internet needs anymore as technology has grown, people want fast and reliable providers like centurylink internet ready for them. So it is no wonder that these side effects come with learning near enough everything online.

“The internet is such a powerful environment, where you can enter any question, and you basically have access to the world’s knowledge at your fingertips,” said lead researcher Matthew Fisher, a fourth-year doctoral candidate in psychology at Yale University.

“It becomes easier to confuse your own knowledge with this external source. When people are truly on their own, they may be wildly inaccurate about how much they know and how dependent they are on the internet,” Fisher said.

In a series of experiments, participants who searched for information on the internet believed they were more knowledgeable than a control group about topics unrelated to the online searches. Participants had an inflated sense of their own knowledge after searching the internet even when they couldn’t find the information they were looking for.

After conducting internet searches, participants also believed their brains were more active than the control group did. The cognitive effects of “being in search mode” on the internet may be so powerful that people still feel smarter even when their online searches reveal nothing, said study co-author Frank Keil, a psychology professor at Yale.

The use of internet searches, not just access to the internet, appeared to inflate participants’ sense of personal knowledge. When the internet group members were given a particular website link to answer questions, they didn’t report higher levels of personal knowledge on the unrelated topics than the control group.

People must be actively engaged in research when they read a book or talk to an expert rather than searching the internet, Fisher said. “If you don’t know the answer to a question, it’s very apparent to you that you don’t know, and it takes time and effort to find the answer. With the internet, the lines become blurry between what you know and what you thnk you know,” he said.

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