attention span affects consumption

Once, the average adult could focus on a single task for 150 seconds. That was back in 2004. By 2012, that number had dropped to 75 seconds. Today, it’s down to just 47 seconds. The decline has been steady, and it’s showing no signs of stopping.

Gloria Mark, a professor at the University of California, has spent over two decades studying human attention. Her research tracked these changes under controlled conditions, often without phones present. The findings point to a growing crisis in how people consume information, especially long-form content like articles, books, and lectures.

When people try to focus, their bodies react with stress. Studies show sharp spikes in galvanic skin response, a measure of stress arousal. These spikes lead to cortisol increases. At the same time, serotonin, oxytocin, and dopamine all drop. These reactions happen in average adults. Researchers believe the impact on children who’ve grown up with digital devices could be even greater.

Short videos are a big part of the problem. They’re designed to hold attention with almost no mental effort. Research using the Mobile Phone Short Video Addiction Tendency Questionnaire found a strong negative link between short video addiction and self-control. The correlation was r = −0.320, with a p-value of 0.026. People with higher addiction scores showed weaker executive control over their attention.

Brain scans back this up. EEG studies show that short video addiction affects theta brainwave activity, which is critical for attention. Prolonged use of short videos activates lower-order brain regions while suppressing higher-order areas tied to self-control. Research involving 48 participants found a significant negative correlation between short video addiction tendency and executive control in the prefrontal region, recorded at r = −0.395.

The effects reach into classrooms and workplaces. Students are struggling to read deeply or retain information. Teachers report more daydreaming, restlessness, and irritability. Academic performance is slipping. Productivity is falling. Surveys indicate that 84% of teachers observe worsening attentiveness in their students, reinforcing how widespread the crisis has become. This erosion of focus mirrors broader concerns about productivity loss across industries, much like the pressures driving data-driven decision making to replace traditional methods in sectors such as agriculture.

The 2015 Microsoft report once compared human attention spans to that of a goldfish, suggesting just 8 seconds. That claim was later viewed as a metaphor. But the underlying trend it pointed to wasn’t wrong. Human attention is shrinking, and long-form content is paying the price.

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