استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

احصل على وصول غير محدود إلى أكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة وقصة مميزة مقابل

$149.99
 
$74.99/سنة
The Perfect Holiday Gift Gift Now

D'oh!

October 24, 2025

|

The Guardian Weekly

IQ scores are shrinking, brain rot is setting in and with every technological advance we are finding it harder to work, remember, think and function. Is digital convenience costing us dearly?

-  By Sophie McBain

STEP INTO the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab in Cambridge, US, and the future feels a little closer. Glass cabinets display prototypes of weird and wonderful creations, from tiny desktop robots to a surrealist sculpture created by an AI model prompted to design a tea set from body parts. In the lobby, an AI waste-sorting assistant named Oscar can tell you where to put your used coffee cup. Five floors up, research scientist Nataliya Kosmyna has been working on wearable brain-computer interfaces she hopes will one day enable people who cannot speak, due to neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, to communicate using their minds.

Kosmyna spends a lot of her time reading and analysing people's brain states. Another project she is working on is a wearable device - one prototype looks like a pair of glasses - that can tell when someone is getting confused or losing focus. Around two years ago, she began receiving emails from strangers who reported that they had started using large language models such as ChatGPT and felt their brain had changed as a result. Their memories didn't seem as good - was that even possible, they asked her? Kosmyna herself had been struck by how quickly people had already begun to rely on generative AI. She noticed colleagues using ChatGPT at work, and the applications she received from researchers hoping to join her team started to look different. Their emails were longer and more formal and, sometimes, when she interviewed candidates on Zoom, she noticed they kept pausing before responding and looking off to the side - were they getting AI to help them, she wondered. And if they were using AI, how much did they even understand of the answers they were giving?

المزيد من القصص من The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly team's small-screen picks of the year, from nature's wonder to a trip to 1970s Belfast

The final season of Jack Rooke's coming out dramedy Big Boys (Channel 4/Netflix/Apple) was as funny and filthy as its two predecessors.

time to read

4 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

THE YEAR THAT WAS

How closely were you paying attention to the news in 2025? The answers to these questions all appeared in the Guardian Weekly - see how many you can recall

time to read

2 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

COUNTRY DIARY

It has become an annual ritual, the cutting of branches from this shapely holly for a winter wreath.

time to read

1 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

PAINT IT ORANGE HOW A CHARITY TURNED ANGER INTO COMMUNITY PRIDE

Dashing through the snow with Father Chris... It does not get any more seasonal, even if it feels like there might be a final syllable missing.

time to read

2 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

EVERDAY HEROES

From a woman speaking out against state violence to a journalist killed in Gaza, here are some of the brave people who made a real difference in 2025

time to read

10 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

A Trumpian Kennedy Center is warning to all cultural institutions

Into the pale stone wall of the Kennedy Center, above its elegant terrace on the edge of the Potomac River, are carved bold and idealistic sentiments.

time to read

3 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

THE INTERREGNUM

Confronted with the 'mobster diplomacy' of Donald Trump, the world finds itself in a transitional moment as the rules-based global order, its institutions and value system face a crisis of credibility and legitimacy

time to read

12 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Albums

From unspooling love to decadent fun, our critics' picks of the year's finest LPs

time to read

10 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

A PARIS SPRINGBOARD

The decade since the 2015 climate accord has been bruising for activists and the planet. Some experts insist progress is being made-but is it really enough?

time to read

6 mins

December 19, 2025

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Tragedy foretold How the rise in antisemitic incidents led to Bondi attack

Shortly after the mass shooting targeting Australia’s Jewish community last Sunday, Rabbi Levi Wolff of Central Sydney Synagogue told reporters that “the inevitable has happened now”.

time to read

3 mins

December 19, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size

Holiday offer front
Holiday offer back