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Does AI make us use our brains less?

by Qaqamba Falithenjwa
illustration: picture: pexels

Remember when we used to memorise phone numbers or do long division without a calculator? These days, thanks to AI and smart devices, even basic thinking tasks have become optional. Just ask Siri, Google, or ChatGPT, and voila—your brain gets to take a back seat. But is all this convenience quietly making our minds a little lazier?

According to Scientific American, frequent reliance on artificial intelligence tools can reduce the need for critical thinking, especially when we use them for decision-making or problem-solving. Whether it’s choosing what to eat or which route to take, algorithms often think for us before we even realise it.

But here’s the plot twist: While AI might make us mentally passive in some areas, it could also push our brains to grow in others. A piece in Nature Human Behaviour suggests that AI might change how we think, encouraging skills like oversight, ethical reasoning, and creative problem-solving—especially when we need to work with AI rather than just consume its output.

Still, there’s a catch. The more we automate, the more we risk “cognitive offloading,” where our brains stop encoding and storing information because we trust the tech to remember for us, according to a Frontiers in Psychology study. The study further highlights that over time, this can shrink our memory muscle, kind of like skipping gym day for your brain.

The trick, it seems, is balance. Use AI to enhance your life, not replace your mind. Let it help with grocery lists and emails, sure—but keep solving puzzles, reading, debating, and yes, even getting a little lost on the way home sometimes.

After all, the most powerful computer you own is still the one between your ears. Give it a workout.

Also see: Could AI chatbots replace therapists?

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