Human Intelligence Sharply Declining - Least surprising headline I've ever read

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No, it's not just you — people really are less smart than they used to be.

As the Financial Times reports, assessments show that people across age groups are having trouble concentrating and losing reasoning, problem-solving, and information-processing skills — all facets of the hard-to-measure metric that "intelligence" is supposed to measure.

These results, the FT reports, are gleaned from benchmarking tests that track cognitive skills in teens and young adults. From the University of Michigan's Monitoring the Future study documenting concentration difficulties of 18-year-old Americans to the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) that measures the learning skills of 15-year-olds around the world, years of research suggest that young people are struggling with reduced attention spans and weakening critical thinking skills.

Though there has been a demonstrably steep decline in cognitive skills since the COVID-19 pandemic due to the educational disruption it presented, these trends have been in evidence since at least the mid-2010s, suggesting that whatever is going on runs much deeper and has lasted far longer than the pandemic.

Obviously, there's no single answer as to why people seem to be struggling with cognitive skills, but one key indicator is the sharp decline in reading and the world's changing relationship to the way we consume information and media. In 2022, for example, the National Endowment for the Arts found that just 37.6 percent of Americans said they'd read a novel or short story in the year prior — a share down from 41.5 percent in 2017 and 45.2 percent in 2012.

It would be easy enough to blame this decline on people reading less (and, presumably, scrolling online brainrot more). But according to 2023 results from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, the same international consortium that puts out the PISA survey, 34 percent of adults in the United States scored at the lowest levels of numeracy, which essentially means that they lack the ability to work with numbers. A year prior, that share was just 29 percent.

Beyond changes in media consumption and the mediums in which we take it, it appears, as the FT notes, our relationship to information generally is shifting too. While there certainly are ways to use tech that don't cause harm to cognition, studies show that "screen time" as we know it today hurts verbal functioning in children and makes it harder for college-age adults to concentrate and retain information.

There isn't any reason to suggest that human intellect has been harmed, the publication counters — but in "both potential and execution," our intelligence is definitely on the downturn.

More on intelligence: People With This Level of Education Use AI the Most at Work
 
>tfw you thought you be living in the Star Trek timeline but you're actually trapped in the Idiocracy timeline
 
This is why I enchanted all of my gear with intelligence bonuses.

That way I can read A&H not become retarded.
 
34 percent of adults in the United States scored at the lowest levels of numeracy, which essentially means that they lack the ability to work with numbers. A year prior, that share was just 29 percent.
Fiver percent of the population dropping into the box that means they’re unable to work with numbers in one year seems like a very high rate of change.
What’s going on here? Demographic changes alone? Or brain rot?
 
Fiver percent of the population dropping into the box that means they’re unable to work with numbers in one year seems like a very high rate of change.
What’s going on here? Demographic changes alone? Or brain rot?
I'm curious to see if this would reverse if we actually get the promised mass deportations. I have a hunch that the millions of Pedros, Ngubus, and Rajeshes we got in the last decade are driving the numbers down.
 
I'm curious to see if this would reverse if we actually get the promised mass deportations. I have a hunch that the millions of Pedros, Ngubus, and Rajeshes we got in the last decade are driving the numbers down.
I’m curious to see the raw data. I wonder if they recorded ethnic origin?
 
I'm curious to see if this would reverse if we actually get the promised mass deportations. I have a hunch that the millions of Pedros, Ngubus, and Rajeshes we got in the last decade are driving the numbers down.
Honestly, with what I can tell working with younger employees and interns, the actual Americans are getting better. They're a lot more resilient, willing to learn and don't have anywhere as many mental/personal issues as my generation.

Deportations will absolutely improve things because you'll get rid of them and won't have these anti-social parasites dragging things down for everyone else.
 
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Boy howdy I have gotten so dumb i'm posting a graph that is totally unrelated to the topic at hand...
 
Is this "decline in human intelligence" any surprise given that our "leaders" struggle to define what a woman is and the left wing media have been telling their readers that women can have penises?
 
You mean hooking up toddlers to the heroin drip of social media and brainrot entertainment because you're too lazy to parent them has terrible implications for the future? At least in my day when parents neglected their children, all they had were 3 stations on the TV and shitty movies on VHS tape. Your kid might fry their brain watching the same Christmas special over and over, or they might end up watching some movies that were too mature for them, but that was it. They weren't being given instruction manuals on how to prank the police or drink poison, and they weren't being exposed to fetish videos disguised as cartoons.

I also think race plays a role. Every time I see kids acting too loudly or too rudely, the perpetrators are those that would fail the paper bag test. Other cultures may be more open and gregarious than mine, but it's clear that they're definitely not applying percussive instruction to their kids as often as they should.
 
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