jeudi 04 décembre 2025
11:00 - 12:00
En ligne

 

Abstract: Cognitive offloading—using external tools to reduce cognitive load—is a core aspect of how humans interact with digital tools. While offloading can boost performance, it may also come with costs, raising the question of when people choose to rely on external aids and when they do not. In this talk, I will highlight emerging insights into individual differences regarding offloading behavior, and discuss challenges in measuring offloading reliably and ecologically. I conclude by outlining open questions about the trade-offs of offloading in an increasingly digital world and what drives people’s decisions to externalize cognition.

Speaker

Dr Sandra Grinschgl is a researcher and lecturer based at the University of Bern in Switzerland. Her work focuses on human–technology interaction (especially cognitive offloading and AI interaction), cognitive enhancement, and metacognition (the self-estimation of cognitive abilities). A strong advocate of Open Science, she shares her materials, data and code, preregisters studies, and supports institutions and individual researchers in implementing open science practices. 

Inscription

Autres événements