popcorn brain, which presents as feelings of the brain popping due to overstimulation from online sources, can also develop in people who doomscroll, making it more challenging for them to engage with the real world.
dr. gold notes that it can lead to these issues because it tweaks the stress response in a way that’s not how it’s naturally supposed to be.
“our body response is meant to be prime for these moments of escaping danger. it’s not meant to be in a constant state of arousal and high alert,” she said. “so, when you’re constantly doomscrolling and you’re having that stress response, what does that do to your body over time?”
however, more research is needed to really determine how all this doomscrolling will unfold for people in the next five to ten years because it’s such a new phenomenon, it’s hard to “know exactly what the long-term effects are.”
just put the phone down? it’s not that easy
many may believe that the solution to doomscrolling is simply to put down the phone, but it’s not that easy. in the short term, it offers a modest level of benefit that keeps people hooked.
“people, in a world that’s uncertain and stressful, they feel a sense of control (when doomscrolling). maybe it’s not really having more control because it’s not actually giving you more control over outcomes … but it feels that way,” said dr. gold. “i have more of a sense of control over what is happening. i have less uncertainty because i’m reading this headline. that quick positive boost makes people want to keep looking at this.”