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The Cognitive Cost of Artificial Intelligence: A Neurocognitive Review
Published in Symposium Proceedings: Artificial Intelligence in Psychology & Mental Health. (Vol. 2, Issue 1, 2026)

Abstract
Artificial Intelligence was originally conceived as a tool for human ease, intended to enhance productivity and streamline complex tasks. However, recent trends suggest a shift from augmentation to a total "cognitive offloading," where humans increasingly outsource critical thinking and memory to AI. This review paper explores the hypothesis that this dependency is contributing to a reversal of the Flynn Effect. After reviewing neuroimaging data from fMRI and EEG studies, the paper identifies significant alterations in neuroplasticity and neural activity. A primary concern is the observed decline in hippocampal volume among individuals who over-rely on AI for routine and complex cognitive tasks. Because the brain follows a "use it or lose it" paradigm, bypassing "desirable difficulties" during information processing leads to a lack of deep memory encoding and weakened retention skills. This phenomenon, often termed "Digital Amnesia," suggests that our neural architecture is physically adapting to a state of passive retrieval rather than active synthesis. The paper concludes that while AI offers immense efficiency, we must develop a balanced Human-AI interaction model. By treating AI as a collaborative partner rather than a cognitive substitute, we can leverage technological speed while preserving the biological integrity and intellectual capacity of the human brain.
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Namika Gumber
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How to Cite
Gumber (2026). The Cognitive Cost of Artificial Intelligence: A Neurocognitive Review. International Journal of Global Mental Health, Innovation, Policy, Action, Culture & Transformation, 2(1), xx-xx. DOI:https://doi.org/10.61113/impact.V2I1.1239
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