Hi, I’m Diana!
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Hi, I’m Diana! Researcher & writer working on self-regulation, practice, and how technology quietly messes with attention.
Currently PhD-shaped.Interested in media interaction, learning processes, music practice, and queer life without the algorithmic panic.
Mostly here to interact with people.
Expect mostly replies to stuff and the odd rant about niche topics. Light on hot takes; heavy on “hm, that’s interesting."
#introduction #AcademicMastodon #PhDLife #SlowInternet #Queer
Hi, nice to meet you! I like programming and language and pictures and ideas.
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Hi, I’m Diana! Researcher & writer working on self-regulation, practice, and how technology quietly messes with attention.
Currently PhD-shaped.Interested in media interaction, learning processes, music practice, and queer life without the algorithmic panic.
Mostly here to interact with people.
Expect mostly replies to stuff and the odd rant about niche topics. Light on hot takes; heavy on “hm, that’s interesting."
#introduction #AcademicMastodon #PhDLife #SlowInternet #Queer
-
Hi, I’m Diana! Researcher & writer working on self-regulation, practice, and how technology quietly messes with attention.
Currently PhD-shaped.Interested in media interaction, learning processes, music practice, and queer life without the algorithmic panic.
Mostly here to interact with people.
Expect mostly replies to stuff and the odd rant about niche topics. Light on hot takes; heavy on “hm, that’s interesting."
#introduction #AcademicMastodon #PhDLife #SlowInternet #Queer
-
Hi, I’m Diana! Researcher & writer working on self-regulation, practice, and how technology quietly messes with attention.
Currently PhD-shaped.Interested in media interaction, learning processes, music practice, and queer life without the algorithmic panic.
Mostly here to interact with people.
Expect mostly replies to stuff and the odd rant about niche topics. Light on hot takes; heavy on “hm, that’s interesting."
#introduction #AcademicMastodon #PhDLife #SlowInternet #Queer
@dianawastaken It's nice to meet you, I'm Sashin.
What you are working on sounds really interesting, I'd love to know more about how our attention works and how technology messes with it.
I am interested at the moment in why things feel good, what makes good music, food, movies etc pleasurable. I am interested in the idea of hedonic adaptation, like how repeated exposure to a stimuli dulls the pleasure or pain we derive from it, also when is the best time to rewatch something.
I am also interested in why we feel nostalgia.
I say interested in but this doesn't amount to much apart from thinking about these things.
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Hi, I’m Diana! Researcher & writer working on self-regulation, practice, and how technology quietly messes with attention.
Currently PhD-shaped.Interested in media interaction, learning processes, music practice, and queer life without the algorithmic panic.
Mostly here to interact with people.
Expect mostly replies to stuff and the odd rant about niche topics. Light on hot takes; heavy on “hm, that’s interesting."
#introduction #AcademicMastodon #PhDLife #SlowInternet #Queer
@dianawastaken Hello and welcome!
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undefined oblomov@sociale.network shared this topic on
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Hi, I’m Diana! Researcher & writer working on self-regulation, practice, and how technology quietly messes with attention.
Currently PhD-shaped.Interested in media interaction, learning processes, music practice, and queer life without the algorithmic panic.
Mostly here to interact with people.
Expect mostly replies to stuff and the odd rant about niche topics. Light on hot takes; heavy on “hm, that’s interesting."
#introduction #AcademicMastodon #PhDLife #SlowInternet #Queer
@dianawastaken Nice. More people here perhaps that do not automatically write in opposite order: Guinevere and King Arthur, now and more then listen to 60's Pop but much more Classic, not avoiding the British too.
Sauerkraut or kimchi , that is a question. -
@dianawastaken Nice. More people here perhaps that do not automatically write in opposite order: Guinevere and King Arthur, now and more then listen to 60's Pop but much more Classic, not avoiding the British too.
Sauerkraut or kimchi , that is a question.@hanktank61 Actually, I have experienced neither so I don't think I have a preference! They aren't popular in the country I live, sadly
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@dianawastaken It's nice to meet you, I'm Sashin.
What you are working on sounds really interesting, I'd love to know more about how our attention works and how technology messes with it.
I am interested at the moment in why things feel good, what makes good music, food, movies etc pleasurable. I am interested in the idea of hedonic adaptation, like how repeated exposure to a stimuli dulls the pleasure or pain we derive from it, also when is the best time to rewatch something.
I am also interested in why we feel nostalgia.
I say interested in but this doesn't amount to much apart from thinking about these things.
@sashin Hey!
I'm actually a bit of a cynic when it comes to the whole "technology is destroying our attention spans" thing. I tried to make that the topic of my thesis early on, and there wasn't enough research that supported the idea at the time. But i'm planning to come back to it later.
I would also assume that your search of the "best time to rewatch something" is a bit elusive, as it's going to vary immensely depending on a lot of factors in your life. But I'm not an authority on this!
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@topofmyvoice It's a shape with quantum properties, clearly. The exact shape changes depending on how it's observed by your supervisors.
Thank you! <3
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@sashin Hey!
I'm actually a bit of a cynic when it comes to the whole "technology is destroying our attention spans" thing. I tried to make that the topic of my thesis early on, and there wasn't enough research that supported the idea at the time. But i'm planning to come back to it later.
I would also assume that your search of the "best time to rewatch something" is a bit elusive, as it's going to vary immensely depending on a lot of factors in your life. But I'm not an authority on this!
@dianawastaken
Are you cynical in the sense that you are pretty sure technology is bad for our attentions in some s new or do you suspect that idea itself is overblown?yeah, I am interested in what those factors are!
Also questions like, how long do you listen to something before you get sick of it, and how long do you have to wait for it to be "good" again. And when meal planning, how many meals fo you have to rotate between to keep things novel!
Why do things get dull with repeat exposure and why do they get fresh again with time?
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@dianawastaken
Are you cynical in the sense that you are pretty sure technology is bad for our attentions in some s new or do you suspect that idea itself is overblown?yeah, I am interested in what those factors are!
Also questions like, how long do you listen to something before you get sick of it, and how long do you have to wait for it to be "good" again. And when meal planning, how many meals fo you have to rotate between to keep things novel!
Why do things get dull with repeat exposure and why do they get fresh again with time?
@sashin 1/3
I meant that I was cynical in relation to the veracity of the statement. The consensus when I was looking into it seemed to be not that "the human attention span was getting shorter" but that, in general, there was less need for people to be focused for prolongued periods of time. And people just adapt to that. Think how in old times it was much more useful to know how to write cursive than nowadays. -
@sashin 1/3
I meant that I was cynical in relation to the veracity of the statement. The consensus when I was looking into it seemed to be not that "the human attention span was getting shorter" but that, in general, there was less need for people to be focused for prolongued periods of time. And people just adapt to that. Think how in old times it was much more useful to know how to write cursive than nowadays.@sashin 2/3
In reality, there was very little proof that people were *actually* losing their ability to concentrate, which is what the alarmist view of the topic argues for. That combined with the usual tendency that people have to hate on the new stuff and loving the old, it just made me very cynical of the argument. Nowadays I have the instinct of raising one eyebrow every time someones mentions "rewiring the brain", and it hasn't failed me yet. -
@sashin 2/3
In reality, there was very little proof that people were *actually* losing their ability to concentrate, which is what the alarmist view of the topic argues for. That combined with the usual tendency that people have to hate on the new stuff and loving the old, it just made me very cynical of the argument. Nowadays I have the instinct of raising one eyebrow every time someones mentions "rewiring the brain", and it hasn't failed me yet.@sashin 3/3
When it comes to the "dulling", I meant that it will depend HEAVILY on the person. We're talking about personal perception, and it's always very hard to make generalized statements in that context. From what I know from my expertise in music, I would assume you're talking about predictability. Stuff is getting predictable, and your brain is getting bored. That's not a generalized experience, though. I'll happily listen to some music tracks on loop. It's all about your perception -
undefined haubles@hachyderm.io shared this topic on