Does Using ChatGPT Really Change Your Brain Activity?
Computer scientist Nataliya Kosmyna at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and her colleagues measured brain-wave activity in university students as they wrote essays either using a chatbot or an Internet search tool, or without any Internet at all. Although the main result is unsurprising, some of the study's findings are more intriguing: for instance, the team saw hints that relying on a chatbot for initial tasks might lead to relatively low levels of brain engagement even when the tool is later taken away.
Echoing some posts about the study on online platforms, Kosmyna is careful to say that the results shouldn't be overinterpreted. This study cannot and did not show 'dumbness in the brain, no stupidity, no brain on vacation,' Kosmyna laughs. It involved only a few dozen participants over a short time and cannot address whether habitual chatbot use reshapes our thinking in the long-term, or how the brain might respond during other AI-assisted tasks. 'We don't have any of these answers in this paper,' Kosmyna says. The work was posted ahead of peer review on the preprint server arXiv on 10 June.
[Sign up for Today in Science, a free daily newsletter]
Kosmyna's team recruited 60 students, aged 18 to 39, from five universities around the city of Boston, Massachusetts. The researchers asked them to spend 20 minutes crafting a short essay answering questions, such as 'should we always think before we speak?', that appear on Scholastic Assessment Tests, or SATs.
The participants were divided into three groups: one used ChatGPT, powered by OpenAI's large language model GPT-4o, as the sole source of information for their essays; another used Google to search for material (without any AI-assisted answers); and the third was forbidden to go online at all. In the end, 54 participants wrote essays answering three questions while in their assigned group, and then 18 were re-assigned to a new group to write a fourth essay, on one of the topics that they had tackled previously.
Each student wore a commercial electrode-covered cap, which collected electroencephalography (EEG) readings as they wrote. These headsets measure tiny voltage changes from brain activity and can show which broad regions of the brain are 'talking' to each other.
The students who wrote essays using only their brains showed the strongest, widest-ranging connectivity among brain regions, and had more activity going from the back of their brains to the front, decision-making area. They were also, unsurprisingly, better able to quote from their own essays when questioned by the researchers afterwards.
The Google group, by comparison, had stronger activations in areas known to be involved with visual processing and memory. And the chatbot group displayed the least brain connectivity during the task.
More brain connectivity isn't necessarily good or bad, Kosmyna says. In general, more brain activity might be a sign that someone is engaging more deeply with a task, or it might be a sign of inefficiency in thinking, or an indication that the person is overwhelmed by 'cognitive overload'.
Interestingly, when the participants who initially used ChatGPT for their essays switched to writing without any online tools, their brains ramped up connectivity — but not to the same level as in the participants who worked without the tools from the beginning.
'This evidence aligns with a worry that many creativity researchers have about AI — that overuse of AI, especially for idea generation, may lead to brains that are less well-practised in core mechanisms of creativity,' says Adam Green, co-founder of the Society for the Neuroscience of Creativity and a cognitive neuroscientist at Georgetown University in Washington DC.
But only 18 people were included in this last part of the study, Green notes, which adds uncertainty to the findings. He also says there could be other explanations for the observations: for instance, these students were rewriting an essay on a topic they had already tackled, and therefore the task might have drawn on cognitive resources that differed from those required when writing about a brand-new topic.
Confoundingly, the study also showed that switching to a chatbot to write an essay after previously composing it without any online tools boosted brain connectivity — the opposite, Green says, of what you might expect. This suggests it could be important to think about when AI tools are introduced to learners to enhance their experience, Kosmyna says. 'The timing might be important.'
Many educational scholars are optimistic about the use of chatbots as effective, personalized tutors. Guido Makransky, an educational psychologist at the University of Copenhagen, says these tools work best when they guide students to ask reflective questions, rather than giving them answers.
'It's an interesting paper, and I can see why it's getting so much attention,' Makransky says. 'But in the real world, students would and should interact with AI in a different way.'
This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on June 25, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Google slugged $55m over Telstra, Optus deal
Tech giant Google has agreed to pay a $55m fine for a deal with Australia's major telcos aimed at reducing search competition. According to the ACCC, the deal involved Telstra and Optus pre-installing only Google Search on Android phones the telcos sold to consumers. In return, Telstra and Optus would receive a share of the revenue generated from ads displayed to consumers via Google Search on these devices. The ACCC said by pre-installing Google Search engines on these devices, the telcos and tech giant engaged in anticompetitive business practices. The ACCC said the breaches in competition laws occurred between December 2019 and March 2021. Google admitted that this relationship with the telcos substantially lessened competition, the ACCC said. The proceedings started on Monday in the Federal Court, with Google admitting liability and agreeing to pay $55m. 'Conduct that restricts competition is illegal in Australia because it usually means less choice, higher costs or worse service for consumers,," ACCC chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb said. Telstra, Optus and TPG last year agreed with the ACCC not to enter into new search exclusive deals with Google. 'Today's outcome, along with Telstra, Optus and TPG's undertakings, have created the potential for millions of Australians to have greater search choice in the future and for competing search providers to gain meaningful exposure to Australian consumers,' Ms Cass-Gottlieb said. The three telcos could configure search services on a device-by-device basis and in ways that may not align with Google settings, the ACCC said. It said Google didn't agree with all of the ACCC's concerns but gave an undertaking to address them.
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
CelHive: The Rising Unicorn Transforming the Future of AI Workforces
Revolutionary AI platform achieves 200,000 users milestone, showcasing unprecedented growth in the booming AI agent technology sector HONG KONG, Aug. 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CelHive is rapidly emerging as the next potential unicorn in the artificial intelligence space, demonstrating explosive growth that exemplifies the transformative power of AI agent technology. With user numbers already surpassing 200,000, the platform is setting new benchmarks in what industry leaders unanimously call "the year of AI agents."The innovative platform seamlessly integrates nearly 25 cutting-edge large language models, intelligently selecting optimal AI solutions for each task while orchestrating sophisticated tool deployments to deliver exceptional user experiences. Redefining Digital Productivity CelHive represents a quantum leap beyond traditional AI models like ChatGPT, Claude, and DeepSeek. Operating as an intelligent digital workforce, the platform proactively executes complex multi-step processes - from crafting comprehensive reports and building dynamic websites to producing engaging presentations, creating compelling videos, designing travel itineraries, conducting sophisticated investment analyses, and developing educational content. This revolutionary approach is transforming how businesses conceptualise productivity, with CelHive users reporting dramatic efficiency gains across diverse industries. Three Pillars of Competitive Advantage CelHive's meteoric rise stems from three groundbreaking competitive advantages that position it at the forefront of AI innovation: Real-Time Intelligence: While competitors rely on outdated data, CelHive's proprietary internet search technology delivers instantaneous access to the world's most current information, providing users with millisecond-response capabilities that keep them ahead of the curve. Enhanced Accuracy: Through sophisticated cross-modal verification systems, CelHive has virtually eliminated AI hallucinations. Its advanced text-image-table cross-validation and query expansion-retrieval-reranking technologies ensure responses that precisely match user intentions with remarkable reliability. AI Collaboration: CelHive's collaborative features enable real-time editing, instant downloads, and genuine partnership between humans and AI, creating workflows that amplify human creativity and strategic thinking. The Agent Space Revolution CelHive's upcoming Agent Space functionality promises to unleash unlimited creative potential. This groundbreaking feature will empower users to upload materials, train personalised AI agents, and build comprehensive knowledge bases. The platform's innovative pay-per-call marketplace model creates exciting opportunities for users to monetise their AI innovations while contributing to a thriving ecosystem of specialised intelligence. "We're witnessing the birth of the world's first truly collaborative AI economy," explains the company's Founder. "CelHive isn't just a platform - it's an entire universe of possibilities where human creativity meets artificial intelligence." Explosive Market Growth The AI agent market's trajectory toward $200 billion by 2025 represents one of the most significant technological opportunities in modern history. CelHive's remarkable user growth - reaching 200,000 users with accelerating adoption rates - demonstrates the platform's potential to capture substantial market share in this high-growth, high-value sector. Industry analysts are particularly impressed by CelHive's user retention rates and engagement metrics, which suggest strong product-market fit and sustainable growth momentum. Unlimited Imagination Space CelHive's rapid expansion showcases the unlimited possibilities when cutting-edge technology meets visionary execution. The platform's multimodal AI capabilities represent the pinnacle of artificial intelligence development, positioning it perfectly for the investment community's shift from infrastructure to value-creating applications. With each passing month, CelHive continues to expand its capabilities, integrate new technologies, and explore innovative use cases that seemed impossible just years ago. This relentless innovation cycle creates boundless opportunities for growth and market expansion. Pioneering the Future of Work CelHive represents the evolution from AI-as-a-tool to AI-as-a-teammate. By combining human creativity with artificial intelligence capabilities, the platform enables businesses to achieve outcomes previously requiring entire departments. The platform's continued innovation cycle and expanding feature set demonstrate the transformative potential when advanced technology meets practical business needs. CelHive is not just participating in the AI revolution—it's defining how artificial intelligence will reshape work, productivity, and human potential in the digital age. As businesses worldwide embrace AI-powered automation, CelHive stands at the forefront of this transformation, proving that the future of work lies in seamless human-AI collaboration that amplifies capabilities and creates extraordinary value. Media contact Brand Name : CelHive Contact Person: Marketing Team Email: info@ Website: in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Forbes
3 hours ago
- Forbes
Amazon's App Store Decision—48 Hours To Delete Your Apps
You have been warned. Amazon has confirmed that 'starting August 20, 2025, you will no longer have access to the Amazon Appstore on your Android device.' That's just 48 hours from now. The retail giant says it will now focus its efforts on its own devices. For anyone who has installed an app from the store, this is a potential security threat and you need to act before the deadline. All apps must be deleted. Per Android Police, 'once no longer supported, apps downloaded via the Amazon Appstore "will not be guaranteed to operate on Android devices." That means no support, which not only risks apps becoming 'highly unstable' but also means any security vulnerabilities will not be patched. While Amazon's advice is to install replacement or replica apps from Google's Play Store, you actually need to do more than that. Any apps you may have installed from Amazon's store need to be deleted. If they remain on your phone in an unsupported state, then it outs your device and your data at risk. Amazon also confirms that 'we will also be discontinuing the Amazon Coins program on August 20, 2025.' Those who have used the store and still have Amazon Coins will see those refunded, albeit details on how and when that will be done seem scarce. Android users should focus on Play Store only for apps, it remains your best bet when it comes to security safeguards and works in tandem with Android's core OS and the Play ecosystem that underpins it. That includes Play Protect, which protects your phone from dangerous apps from any source. It's also worth noting that Google is pushing a wider clampdown in third-party stores with its new Advanced Protection Mode, albeit Amazon would no doubt have been seen as an official store for all phones had it continued longer term.