This Man Could Save Your Life
Very Interesting|November - December 2016

Neuroscientist Daniel Levitin’s new book explores information overload

Graham Southorn
This Man Could Save Your Life

The torrent of text messages, emails and social media updates seems to grow bigger every day. In The Organized Mind: Thinking Straight In The Age Of Information Overload, Daniel Levitin investigates this modern phenomenon. We asked him what effect it has on our brains, and for some practical tips.

What’s the evidence that we live in an age of ‘information overload’? 

The amount of information is increasing at a really rapid rate – in the last two years we’ve created more information than we did in all of human history up to that point. Several studies show that, as individuals, we’re being inundated. The average American took in five times more information every day in 2011 than they did in 1986. That’s the equivalent of reading 175 newspapers every day from cover to cover. People say they’re overwhelmed – they feel like they can’t keep up no matter how hard they work.

Is it because of the way our brains store information? 

This story is from the November - December 2016 edition of Very Interesting.

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This story is from the November - December 2016 edition of Very Interesting.

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