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Email, RSS feeds, and the one-armed bandit

Technology,microposts — Nathan on September 15, 2008 at 11:08 am

Micro-Post 2

An article in the Guardian a couple of weeks ago examined how the use of email can be compared to gambling addition.  Here’s a good quote:

Dr Tom Stafford, a lecturer at the University of Sheffield and co-author of the book Mind Hacks, believes that the same fundamental learning mechanisms that drive gambling addicts are also at work in email users. “Both slot machines and email follow something called a ‘variable interval reinforcement schedule’,” he says, “which has been established as the way to train in the strongest habits. This means that rather than reward an action every time it is performed, you reward it sometimes, but not in a predictable way. So with email, usually when I check it there is nothing interesting, but every so often there’s something wonderful – an invite out, or maybe some juicy gossip – and I get a reward.” This is enough to make it difficult for us to resist checking email, even when we’ve only just looked.

I don’t know if I feel this way about email, but this describes my relationship to my RSS feeds on Google reader to a tee.  I end up checking my feeds every 5 or 10 minutes looking for something interesting in the sea of ho-hum posts.

Am I alone, or does anyone else feel this way?

[As an aside - do you think I am contributing to the problem with my concept of Micro-Posts?]

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