I have experienced a similar effect related to my use of GPS. My sense of location and direction declined over a period of time where my GPS increased. My ability to navigate has returned after I reduced my use of GPS to an absolute minimum.
I think that the brain I like muscle as you described it. Its ability carry out certain tasks will decline when it’s
Yes, and you gave a very interesting example. I caught myself in the same situation where I just can turn on the 'breadcrumb' feature on my Garmin watch, and just... come back to the starting point without any second thoughts.
When it comes to GPS, recently I was thinking about how my parents navigated through our trips when I was a child - with this huge, paper-made map while driving a car.
From today's perspective it looks... hilarious at least, right?
You’re absolutely right that there is cognitive decline in becoming reliant on AI.
As you mentioned, mapping out the areas you want to improve, maintain, and cultivate is a great start but also requiring creativity in undertaking the nuances and human experience that isn’t always a given with AI.
I myself have tried to double down on my critical thinking, learning abilities, and social skills to build competency that AI will never do better, but more importantly are my no fly zone.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts, I appreciate it a lot! Last week I found very interesting research around it, and I guess that I will write about it more in the coming days (or weeks) here in the upcoming issue of the newsletter. It's gold when it comes to certain conclusions and methodology. I am sharing because I think it will be interesting for you.
I have experienced a similar effect related to my use of GPS. My sense of location and direction declined over a period of time where my GPS increased. My ability to navigate has returned after I reduced my use of GPS to an absolute minimum.
I think that the brain I like muscle as you described it. Its ability carry out certain tasks will decline when it’s
not used.
Yes, and you gave a very interesting example. I caught myself in the same situation where I just can turn on the 'breadcrumb' feature on my Garmin watch, and just... come back to the starting point without any second thoughts.
When it comes to GPS, recently I was thinking about how my parents navigated through our trips when I was a child - with this huge, paper-made map while driving a car.
From today's perspective it looks... hilarious at least, right?
Yes, it does.
It was a bit dangerous too regarding road safety.
A very old idea is to create a list of travel points. Like a list of cities to drive towards on the German Autobahn.
The shadows on the road at time of day can provide an approximate direction.
A mental map is also helpful.
You’re absolutely right that there is cognitive decline in becoming reliant on AI.
As you mentioned, mapping out the areas you want to improve, maintain, and cultivate is a great start but also requiring creativity in undertaking the nuances and human experience that isn’t always a given with AI.
I myself have tried to double down on my critical thinking, learning abilities, and social skills to build competency that AI will never do better, but more importantly are my no fly zone.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts, I appreciate it a lot! Last week I found very interesting research around it, and I guess that I will write about it more in the coming days (or weeks) here in the upcoming issue of the newsletter. It's gold when it comes to certain conclusions and methodology. I am sharing because I think it will be interesting for you.
-> https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5250447