If I am not careful, my cellphone will wake me up in the wee hours
with buzzes or pings to let me know that news organizations and family
members on the other side of the world, in different time zones, are
trying to get my attention.
Is it too dramatic to say that "there is a global war" for our attention? I don't think so.
Last year I did a little experiment with students in my
Media Economics course.
Each of them was asked to keep track of how many notifications or
alerts they received on their phones or computers during a 45-minute
lecture. The
average was about 15 alerts, or one every three minutes. WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, and Snapchat were the chief distractions.
For a professor leading a class, these alerts could be considered competition.
(At left, Christian Zibreg tells how to
remove distracting messages from the locked screen.)
The distraction industry
The
competition for user attention has never been greater, and every news
site and app is finding new ways to lure people away from whatever they
are doing with ever-more-insistent alarms, buzzes, pings, beeps, lights,
you name it.
This year, the Media Economics class is slightly larger, with 57 students, and the instructions were different:
pick any 60-minute period and measure the number of alerts or notifications received--in essence, any signal that
attempts to distract you from what you are doing.
On average, in 60 minutes students reported receiving
41.3 alerts (median 26).