Mind Tricks Behind Endless Scrolling
Bristol, United KingdomSun May 17 2026
When people keep scrolling through feeds, their brains are doing more than just mindlessly looking. Studies from the University of Bristol and the University at Buffalo show that those with better working memory – the part of our brain that helps us focus – actually pay less attention to each post after they connect with the person posting it. Instead, their brains focus on remembering who is linked to whom.
The researchers ran five experiments. Participants joined online groups or followed made‑up experts and then were tested on how much time they spent reading posts versus looking at the profiles of other users. The results were clear: people who scored high on memory tests spent less time reading content and more time exploring the social network around them.
This shift is part of a process called “cognitive offloading. ” It means the brain learns to rely on external sources – like a friend’s profile or a group page – for information. Once we know we can find details elsewhere, the brain treats the original content as less urgent. In one test, participants who followed a fictional engineer remembered fewer details about her work but recalled more about her connections. Another test found that followers of a university page clicked on fewer posts and instead visited more follower profiles.
The takeaway is that heavy scrolling isn’t always a sign of mental overload. It can also mean the brain is adapting to constant noise, learning to filter what matters from what doesn’t. People with strong focus aren’t simply consuming more; they’re creating mental shortcuts that let them retrieve information later.
https://localnews.ai/article/mind-tricks-behind-endless-scrolling-5918753c
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