Professor Evan F. Risko, of the
Department of Psychology at the University of Waterloo, led a recent study
where the team asked about 100 participants a series of general-knowledge
questions, such as naming the capital of France. Participants indicated if they
knew the answer or not. For half of the study, participants had access to the
Internet. They had to look up the answer when they responded that they did not
know the answer. In the other half of the study, participants did not have
access to the Internet.
The team found that the people who had
access to the web were about 5 per cent more likely to say that they did not
know the answer to the question. Furthermore, in some contexts, the people with
access to the Internet reported feeling as though they knew less compared to
the people without access.
"With the ubiquity of the
Internet, we are almost constantly connected to large amounts of information.
And when that data is within reach, people seem less likely to rely on their
own knowledge," said Professor Risko, Canada Research Chair in Embodied
and Embedded Cognition.
In interpreting the results, the
researchers speculated that access to the Internet might make it less
acceptable to say you know something but are incorrect. It is also possible
that participants were more likely to say they didn't know an answer when they
had access to the web because online searching offers an opportunity to confirm
their answer or resolve their curiosity, and the process of finding out is
rewarding.
"Our results suggest that access
to the Internet affects the decisions we make about what we know and don't
know," said Risko. "We hope this research contributes to our growing
understanding of how easy access to massive amounts of information can
influence our thinking and behaviour."
David McLean and Amanda Ferguson,
research assistants, are co-authors of the study, which appears in the journal, Consciousness
and Cognition. Professor Risko plans to further the research in
this area by investigating the factors that lead to individuals' reduced
willingness to respond when they have access to the web.
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