jsr on Nostr: Constant algorithmic improvements have empirically reverse engineered the human ...
Constant algorithmic improvements have empirically reverse engineered the human psyche.
I suspect that explicit research neuroscience hasn't caught up to the insights about how to induce behavioral dependence that are embodied in these systems.
The user experience of most platforms now mirrors maladaptive behavior-maintaining effects you could *only* achieve with most addictive drugs up to about a decade ago.
We need to avoid the moral panic, but it's impossible to overstate how novel this is for our brains.
One thing we know from behavioral addiction research (my old field) is that the brain is plastic.
When you induce one category of addiction, it changes the motivational substrate of the brain in sticky ways.
And coss-sensitizes / potentiates other forms of addiction and behavioral dependence.
This will only accelerate & become less scrutable with improvements in AI.
We are in the earliest, earliest days of trying to understand what this means for the next decades of human life.
Painting: The Opium Den, Edward Burra,1933
I suspect that explicit research neuroscience hasn't caught up to the insights about how to induce behavioral dependence that are embodied in these systems.
The user experience of most platforms now mirrors maladaptive behavior-maintaining effects you could *only* achieve with most addictive drugs up to about a decade ago.
We need to avoid the moral panic, but it's impossible to overstate how novel this is for our brains.
One thing we know from behavioral addiction research (my old field) is that the brain is plastic.
When you induce one category of addiction, it changes the motivational substrate of the brain in sticky ways.
And coss-sensitizes / potentiates other forms of addiction and behavioral dependence.
This will only accelerate & become less scrutable with improvements in AI.
We are in the earliest, earliest days of trying to understand what this means for the next decades of human life.
Painting: The Opium Den, Edward Burra,1933
