“Then They Put The Electrodes On Me”

Shortcuts help but can they also hurt? Do we miss something fundamental by taking an abbreviated route, or does arriving at our destination sooner allow us to use the time more profitably? Here’s the thing: We’re going to find out the answer. Electrodes will be attached to our brains, pills will become available, genes will be modified. It’s closer than you might think. Are you prepared? The opening of “Zap Your Brain Into the Zone,” Sally Adee’s New Scientist account of her experimentation with brain enhancement:

I’m close to tears behind my thin cover of sandbags as 20 screaming, masked men run towards me at full speed, strapped into suicide bomb vests and clutching rifles. For every one I manage to shoot dead, three new assailants pop up from nowhere. I’m clearly not shooting fast enough, and panic and incompetence are making me continually jam my rifle.

My salvation lies in the fact that my attackers are only a video, projected on screens to the front and sides. It’s the very simulation that trains US troops to take their first steps with a rifle, and everything about it has been engineered to feel like an overpowering assault. But I am failing miserably. In fact, I’m so demoralised that I’m tempted to put down the rifle and leave.

Then they put the electrodes on me.

I am in a lab in Carlsbad, California, in pursuit of an elusive mental state known as ‘flow’– that feeling of effortless concentration that characterises outstanding performance in all kinds of skills.

Flow has been maddeningly difficult to pin down, let alone harness, but a wealth of new technologies could soon allow us all to conjure up this state. The plan is to provide a short cut to virtuosity, slashing the amount of time it takes to master a new skill – be it tennis, playing the piano or marksmanship.” (Thanks Browser.)

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