Google effects on memory: a meta-analytical review of the media effects of intensive Internet search behavior.

Published
February 02, 2024
Journal
Frontiers in public health
PICOID
2761c06c
DOI
Citations
1
Keywords
Google effects, Internet use, cognition and memory, media effects, meta-analysis
Copyright
Copyright © 2024 Gong and Yang.
Patients/Population/Participants

people

Intervention

intensive Internet search behavior

Comparison

using a mobile phone to browse the Internet rather than a computer

Outcome

cognitive load, behavioral phenotype, cognitive self-esteem

Abstract

P
I
C
O

People are increasingly using the web for fact-checking and other forms of information seeking. The "Google effects" refers to the idea that individuals rely on the Internet as a source of knowledge rather than remembering it for themselves. However, few literature review have yet comprehensively examined the media effects of this intensive Internet search behavior. In this study, by carrying out meta-analysis, we found that google effects is closely associated with cognitive load, behavioral phenotype and cognitive self-esteem. And this phenomenon is also more likely to happen while using a mobile phone to browse the Internet rather than a computer. People with a larger knowledge base are less susceptible to the consequences of Internet use than those with a smaller knowledge base. The media effect was stronger for persons who had used the Internet before than for those who had not. And meta-analyses show that participants in North America (parameter = -1.0365, 95%CI = [-1.8758, -0.1972],

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