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  • Facebook and Twitter are creating a vain generation of self-obsessed people with chil

    Facebook and Twitter are creating a vain generation of self-obsessed people with child-like need for feedback, warns top scientist


    Facebook and Twitter have created a generation obsessed with themselves, who have short attention spans and a childlike desire for constant feedback on their lives, a top scientist believes.
    Repeated exposure to social networking sites leaves users with an 'identity crisis', wanting attention in the manner of a toddler saying: 'Look at me, Mummy, I've done this.'
    Baroness Greenfield, professor of pharmacology at Oxford University, believes the growth of internet 'friendships' – as well as greater use of computer games – could effectively 'rewire' the brain.

    Vain generation: A top Oxford scientist has warned that repeated exposure to social networking websites could harm users. (Picture posed by model)
    This can result in reduced concentration, a need for instant gratification and poor non-verbal skills, such as the ability to make eye contact during conversations.
    More than 750million people across the world use Facebook to share photographs and videos and post regular updates of their movements and thoughts.

    Millions have also signed up to Twitter, the 'micro-blogging' service that lets members circulate short text and picture messages about themselves.
    Baroness Greenfield, former director of research body the Royal Institution, said: 'What concerns me is the banality of so much that goes out on Twitter.
    'Why should someone be interested in what someone else has had for breakfast? It reminds me of a small child (saying): “Look at me Mummy, I'm doing this”, “Look at me Mummy I'm doing that”.
    'It's almost as if they're in some kind of identity crisis. In a sense it's keeping the brain in a sort of time warp.'

    The academic suggested that some Facebook users feel the need to become 'mini celebrities' who are watched and admired by others on a daily basis.
    They do things that are 'Facebook worthy' because the only way they can define themselves is by 'people knowing about them'.
    'It's almost as if people are living in a world that's not a real world, but a world where what counts is what people think of you or (if they) can click on you,' she said.

    'Think of the implications for society if people worry more about what other people think about them than what they think about themselves.'
    Her views were echoed by Sue Palmer, a literacy expert and author, who said girls in particular believe they are a 'commodity they must sell to other people' on Facebook.
    She said: 'People used to have a portrait painted but now we can more or less design our own picture online. It's like being the star of your own reality TV show that you create and put out to the world.'

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...ed-people.html

  • #2
    One more step towards the complete pussification of the human species.

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    • #3
      ive noticed alot of girls do this.,......

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      • #4




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        • #5
          I read this article the yesterday. It is scarily true to a few girls I know..

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          • #6
            AKA Attention Whoring.......

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            • #7
              Originally posted by led View Post
              Facebook and Twitter are creating a vain generation of self-obsessed people with child-like need for feedback, warns top scientist



              http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...ed-people.html
              your sig is creating an engorged vein in my pants....


              just sayin

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Taaj Manzoor View Post




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                • #9
                  I have been saying this for a long time, Facebook and these other network sites are making an already egotistical generation even more self absorbed.

                  If you are on FB you might be gay.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by - v e t - View Post
                    your sig is creating an engorged vein in my pants....


                    just sayin
                    At least in e-world its still erects.

                    Comment

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