The Cognitive Effect of Information Outsourcing On February 11, 2025, 红斯灯影像 held the first spring Common Hour for the 2024-25 with a thought-provoking presentation by Brittany Harman, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology. The event spotlighted Harman鈥檚 new research on the impact of technology on memory. Her talk, titled 鈥溾業 Can Always Just Google It Later:鈥 Is Digital Amnesia a Credible Threat to Learning and Memory?鈥, delved into the cognitive consequences of our growing reliance on digital tools. Image Harman introduced the concept of digital amnesia, also known as the 鈥淕oogle effect,鈥 or the tendency to forget information that is readily accessible online. This phenomenon, she explained, is a modern manifestation of what ancient philosophers like Socrates once feared: that externalizing memory could have an undesirable impact on cognitive abilities.鈥淒ifferent types of technological innovations are typically viewed, at least initially, as a cause for concern,鈥 Harman noted. 鈥淚n the digital age, this has a direct impact on how we experience information, how we think about information, how we use it, and then how we remember it.鈥 One of the foundational studies in this area is the photo-taking impairment effect, first demonstrated by psychologist Linda Henkel, Ph.D., in 2014. Participants in Henkel鈥檚 study were less likely to remember artworks they photographed in a museum compared to those they simply observed. Another important study was conducted by Betsy Sparrow and colleagues in 2011, who investigated digital amnesia and coined the term 鈥淕oogle effect.鈥 Their research found that participants were less likely to remember information when they were told it would be stored online鈥攅ven when explicitly instructed to try to remember it.Building on the work of Henkel and Sparrow, Harman is exploring how digital amnesia manifests in both laboratory and real-world educational settings. Her research focuses on three key areas: Controlled environment: Can the Google effect reliably be produced in a controlled lab setting where some participants are told they will have future access to the material?Classroom application: Can digital amnesia be observed in a college classroom when students expect lecture materials to be posted online?Reduced motivation: Is the Google effect a result of reduced motivation to engage in deeper cognitive processing when digital access is assumed? Harman emphasized the broader implications of her work, particularly in educational contexts when memory is outsourced to technology鈥攚hether through photos, search engines, or cloud storage鈥攖here is often a disengagement from the deeper cognitive processes that support learning.鈥淲e need to understand how digital convenience shapes our mental habits,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f students believe they don鈥檛 need to remember information because it鈥檚 always accessible, they may not develop the foundational knowledge necessary for deeper learning.鈥Ultimately, Harman hopes her findings will inform better educational practices and policies. By understanding how digital tools influence attention, memory, and learning, educators can make more informed decisions about how and when to integrate technology into the classroom. Contact 红斯灯影像 Office of Marketing and Communications 1015 Philadelphia Avenue Chambersburg, Pa. 17201