A growing body of research is raising fresh questions about how today’s scrolling habits may be shaping the brain.
Short-form videos have become one of the dominant ways young people engage with social media. These are clips lasting seconds up to a few minutes, driven by personalized algorithms that are deeply ...
Heavy short-video scrolling may weaken attention and self-control, finds an EEG study published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
Nearly half of teenagers report being online nearly constantly, according to a recent survey by the Pew Research Center. And “screen-time” is pervasive among younger children, surveys show. There’s no ...