Episode 13
The Verification Tax & Attention Hijacking
Your brain evolved to trust what it sees. For millions of years, that worked. Now? Deepfakes, synthetic media, AI-generated everything. That instinct gets you fooled.
This is Episode 3 of our AI and the Brain series. Today we're covering two forces acting on your brain that most people don't even realize are happening.
In this episode:
- The Verification Tax: the mental exhaustion of constantly trying to figure out what's real
- Why your brain shuts down under cognitive overload instead of working harder
- Delta wave activity in heavy digital users - your brain showing sleep patterns while you're awake
- Why misinformation wins when you're already exhausted
- Attention Hijacking: how social media algorithms manipulate your dopamine system like a slot machine
- Brainwave changes that persist 15+ minutes after you close the app
- Zombie scrolling, doomscrolling, and vicarious traumatization
- The difference between tool AI (you're driving) and algorithmic AI (you're the passenger)
- Psychological inoculation: building immunity to manipulation techniques
- Practical boundaries for protecting your cognitive resources
Core message: Tool AI puts you in the driver's seat. Algorithmic AI puts you in the passenger seat - and the driver doesn't care where you want to go.
Referenced episodes: Episode 1 (AI Isn't Coming For Anything), Episode 2 (Cognitive Offloading)
Research Referenced in This Episode:
- The "Brain Rot" Phenomenon: Yousef and colleagues (2025) dive into the concept of "brain rot" in the digital era, exploring what infinite scrolling and low-quality content do to the cognitive health of Gen Z and Gen Alpha. Published in Brain Sciences.
- Social Media's Modern Day High: A 2025 study by Satani et al. tracking real-time brainwave changes—like dopamine spikes, attention hijacking, and cognitive fatigue—while users scroll through social media feeds. Published in Cureus.
- Teen Addiction & Social Media Algorithms: De et al. (2025) explored the neurophysiological impacts and ethical concerns of AI-driven social media algorithms that are designed to maximize screen time for teenagers. Published in Cureus.
- Multitasking and Cognitive Load: Boere et al. (2024) used mobile brain-scanning (fNIRS) to measure exactly what happens to the prefrontal cortex when our brains are forced to handle complex multitasking and cognitive overload. Published in Neuroimage: Reports.
- Screen Time & Teen Depression: A massive dose-response meta-analysis by Liu et al. (2022) that quantifies how every extra hour spent on social media increases the risk of depression in adolescents. Published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
- Passive Scrolling and Depression: Wang et al. (2025) researched how passive social media consumption links to "fear of missing out" (FOMO), vicarious traumatization, and depression during public health crises. Published in Frontiers in Psychology.
- Why Misinformation Persists: Zhou & Shen (2024) explain the cognitive fallacies and motivational biases that make fake news and misinformation so hard to debunk, as well as the cognitive cost of skepticism. Published in Frontiers in Psychology.
- Decision Neuroscience & Attention: A 2023 editorial by Chew and colleagues breaking down the brain mechanics behind goal-directed (top-down) versus stimulus-driven (bottom-up) attention. Published in Frontiers in Neuroscience.
- Cognitive Fatigue and Performance: Stafylidis and team (2025) looked into how heavy mental exhaustion and cognitive fatigue mess with vigilance, reaction times, and physical performance. Published in Sports.
- Crisis & Pandemic Fatigue Online: White et al. (2024) break down how internet users express digital fatigue, information avoidance, and feeling overwhelmed by constant emergencies on social media platforms. Published in BMC Public Health.
