That is the topic of my latest Free Press column, responding to a recent study out of MIT. Here is one excerpt:
To see how lopsided their approach is, consider a simple parable. It took me a lot of “cognitive load”—a key measure used in their paper—to memorize all those state capitals in grade school, but I am not convinced it made me smarter or even significantly better informed. I would rather have spent the time reading an intelligent book or solving a math puzzle. Yet those memorizations, according to the standards of this new MIT paper, would qualify as an effective form of cognitive engagement. After all, they probably would have set those electroencephalograms (EEGs)—a test that measures electrical activity in the brain, and a major standard for effective cognition used in the paper—a-buzzin’.
The important concept here is one of comparative advantage, namely, doing what one does best or enjoys the most. Most forms of information technology, including LLMs, allow us to reallocate our mental energies as we prefer. If you use an LLM to diagnose the health of your dog (as my wife and I have done), that frees up time to ponder work and other family matters more productively. It saved us a trip to the vet. Similarly, I look forward to an LLM that does my taxes for me, as it would allow me to do more podcasting.
If you look only at the mental energy saved through LLM use, in the context of an artificially generated and controlled experiment, it will seem we are thinking less and becoming mentally lazy. And that is what the MIT experiment did, because if you are getting some things done more easily your cognitive load is likely to go down.
But you also have to consider, in a real-world context, what we do with all that liberated time and mental energy. This experiment did not even try to measure the mental energy the subjects could redeploy elsewhere; for instance, the time savings they would reap in real-life situations by using LLMs. No wonder they ended up looking like such slackers.
Here is the original study. Here is another good critique of the study.
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