Stress Technology
For Digital Future | January 3, 2008
, profesor de psicología de la universidad del estado de California , ha analizado en un libro titulado technostress . Stress that produces the increasing amount of technology that we use in everyday life is increasingly being studied by the researchers of mental health. Larry Rosen, professor of psychology at the University of California, has analyzed in a book entitled technostress. controla la tecnología y no ésta la que marque su ritmo vital. According to Rosen, advances in technology we can save time and help us work better, but the user needs to set clear limits so that he is who controls the technology and not subservient to check their vital rhythm.
mostraba que el área del cerebro que controla el comportamiento multi funcional -realizar diversas tareas a la vez- utiliza un mecanismo nombrado bifurcación. A recent study by the National Institutes of Health in the U.S. showed that the area of the brain that controls the behavior multi-functional perform several tasks at once, using a mechanism named fork. Thanks to him we can temporarily divert our attention, focus on other activities and then return to the initial problem. When there is overload, the brain area stores the tasks not completed in anticipation of a good time to resolve them. If you can not play throughout the day, ordered its completion in the evening, keeping the mind active and deprived of sleep.
According to Rosen, another of the problems caused by multi activity of new technologies is the difficulty in concentrating. The brain becomes addicted to the high levels that cause biochemical handle several tasks at once and just for being unable to concentrate on one.



























August 19th, 2008 at 3:25 a.m.
the truth is not wise to stress eera wrong in this way but would like to make an order to reduce the stress without having to fight with this device called PC?
xD