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Tech

Poking the Habit

Facebook may be more addictive than cigarettes, everybody.

You know the feeling. A sort of internal itch, it starts with a faint idea. Wouldn’t it be nice to see what my friends are up to? But, no, you’re working. You need to finish your article or file a report or get to your appointment on time. But you can just check Facebook quickly, can’t you? And then you’re five minutes late to your appointment, again. Your boss is emailing you about your work, again. You scramble to refocus on the task at hand while chiding yourself, again. No more Facebook!

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These feelings, are not so different from the feelings of addiction that alcoholics and smokers feel. Anyone addicted to anything will contemplate engaging in the behavior, usually acknowledge that it’s a bad idea, but come up with some sort of rationalization as to why it’s okay (just this one time). The addict will then usually experience some sort of negative consequence, and then commit to staying away from the compulsive behavior. Until next time.

A new study suggests that social networking services such as Facebook and Twitter are more difficult to resist than cigarettes or alcohol. Researchers at University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business recently released preliminary data on a study of impulse control performed on 205 Germans between the ages of eighteen and eighty-eight.

Read the rest at Motherboard.