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What Screen Time Is Really Doing to Your Body with Manoush Zomorodi

5/4/202646 min

We hear a lot about how screens affect our mental health, but time spent on computers and smartphones is having just as much of an impact on our physical health — from brain fog and weakened core muscles to changes in our posture, our sleep, and even the shape of our eyes.

As part of our series on spring cleaning your wellbeing, Dr. Laurie sits down with journalist and podcast host Manoush Zomorodi, author of Body Electric, to explore how modern tech habits are affecting us physically, and what steps we can take to protect our health in a world where screens aren’t going away anytime soon.

Experts Mentioned:

  • Manoush Zomorodi, journalist, author, and host of NPR's TED Radio Hour
  • Dr. Keith Diaz, exercise physiologist and Florence Irving Associate Professor of Behavioral Medicine at Columbia University Medical Center
  • Dr. Maria Liu, Professor of Clinical Optometry at UC Berkeley and founder of the Myopia Control Clinic
  • Dr. Rick Neitzel, Associate Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at the University of Michigan
  • Dr. Peter Strick, Thomas Detre Professor and Chair of Neurobiology at the University of Pittsburgh
  • Dr. Sahib Khalsa, psychiatrist and neuroscientist at UCLA

Resources Mentioned:

Related Episodes:

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Clips

Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Laurie Santos· Host0:00

    [intro music] Pushkin. [gentle music] If you follow the research on the science of happiness, you've probably heard a lot about the connection between screen time and wellbeing. It's a problem that I think about a lot, and a topic that we talk about on the show a lot. But lately, I've found myself wondering, what if we're missing the bigger picture?

  2. Manoush Zomorodi· Guest0:29

    We hear, you know, the mental health epidemic, growing rates of depression and anxiety has to do with the content that we get, right?

  3. Laurie Santos· Host0:38

    This is journalist Manoush Zomorodi. Some of you may also know Manoush as the host of NPR's TED Radio Hour.

  4. Manoush Zomorodi· Guest0:45

    This idea that we are taking in outrage, headlines, violence, also comparing ourselves to other people, that it is purely sort of a psychological thing, that it's something going on in our heads.

  5. Laurie Santos· Host0:58

    Manoush says that given all the focus on how technology affects our minds, it's easy to overlook another important part of the story.

  6. Manoush Zomorodi· Guest1:06

    What we're not taking into account is what we actually do with our bodies when we are spending all that time taking in that content. We are sitting and looking at a screen for long stretches of time, and we now know that the average American adult spends 12 and a half hours consuming media

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