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Title Social media and your brain : web-based communication is changing how we think and express ourselves / C.G. Prado, PhD, FRSC, editor.

Publication Info. Santa Barbara, California : Praeger, an imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC, [2017]

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 3rd Floor Stacks  302.231 So13 2017    ---  Available
1 copy being processed for Axe Acquisitions Order.
Description xv, 154 pages ; 25 cm
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 137-143) and index.
Contents Introduction / C.G. Prado -- The role of habit / C.G. Prado -- Bored, addicted, or both : how we use social media now / Mark Kingwell -- Attention, emotion, and desire in the age of social media / Khadija Coxon -- Social media and self-control : the vices and virtues of attention / Juan Pablo Bermúdez -- Does social media interfere with the capacity to make reasoned arguments? / Chris Beeman -- Exclusive spaces / Alex Leitch -- Social media and communicative unlearning : learning to forget in communicating / Paul Fairfield -- Prices paid for social media use / Lawrie McFarlane -- Afterword : Realizing the consequences of Internet and social media usage / Bruce MacNaughton.
Summary "While society has widely condemned the effects on preteens and teens' natural social maturation of digitally enabled communication, such as texting and messaging, and of social media apps, such as Facebook, Instagram, and SnapChat, these forms of communication are adversely affecting everyone, including adults. This book examines how social media and modern communication methods are isolating users socially, jeopardizing their intellectual habits, and, as a result, decreasing their chances of achieving social and professional success. The ubiquitous use of the Internet and social media is changing our society--in some ways, for the worse. Use of social media, the Internet, and other purely digital and less-personal communication methods are distorting the intellectual and social maturation of teens and preteens in particular--those among us who were born into and raised with Internet technology. People's ability to read facial expressions, interpret subtle differences in spoken intonation, and perceive body language is in significant decline due to the use of social media and the Internet largely replacing direct, face-to-face contact with other human beings. This book documents how changes in our daily behavior caused by the proliferation of social media are reshaping individuals' personalities and causing an evolution of the character of our society as a whole. Readers will understand how these important changes came about and how more connectivity all too often leads to more ignorance and less comprehension, and will consider solutions that could counter the negative effects of being 'too connected, too often.'"--Publisher's description.
Subject Internet -- Social aspects.
Social media.
Interpersonal communication.
Communication -- Social aspects.
Thought and thinking.
Communication -- Social aspects. (OCoLC)fst00870009
Internet -- Social aspects. (OCoLC)fst01766793
Interpersonal communication. (OCoLC)fst00977344
Social media. (OCoLC)fst01741098
Thought and thinking. (OCoLC)fst01150249
Added Author Prado, C. G., editor.
ISBN 9781440854538 (alk. paper)
144085453X (alk. paper)
9781440854545 (ebook)
Standard No. 40026855172

 
    
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