The pervasive “overstimulation culture,” driven by platform architectures that exploit neurological reward pathways, imposes a significant cognitive cost on the individual. Utilizing a thematic narrative synthesis of neurobiological and psychological data, this article presents the Attentional-Identity Feedback Loop: a unified, escalating cascade model that links digital design practices to deep-seated psychosocial deficits. The persistent regime of high-frequency, low-level micro-stimulation triggers dopamine dysregulation, characterized by the desensitization and downregulation of prefrontal cortex (PFC) receptors. This adaptation degrades executive function and results in attentional fragmentation – a state of chronic task-switching and metabolic switching cost – that erodes the capacity for deep focus. Critically, this fragmentation minimizes the internal reflection time necessary for activating the Default Mode Network (DMN), a core process in constructing a stable narrative identity. The resulting identity diffusion is compounded by emotional consequences, such as low frustration tolerance and the aversion to uncertainty, which inevitably fragments community and compromises social resilience. The paper concludes by proposing a dual-recovery framework: the cultivation of individual volitional attention and slowness, supported by systemic regulatory frameworks for ethical digital design and mandatory cognitive literacy.
Elias Moussa (Tue,) studied this question.
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