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This opinion piece discusses how smartphones trigger a dopamine response similar to how pigeons are drawn to a light signaling food. It argues that phones create a constant desire, not gratification, and can hinder real social connection. The author suggests limiting device access to protect children.
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- AI Headline
- What Pigeons Can Teach Us About Our Phone Fixation
- Simplified Title
- Doucleff Explains Phone Fixation Using Pigeon Behavior
- AI Excerpt
- This opinion piece discusses how smartphones trigger a dopamine response similar to how pigeons are drawn to a light signaling food. It argues that phones create a constant desire, not gratification, and can hinder real social connection. The author suggests limiting device access to protect children.
- Subject Tags
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Smartphones Dopamine Addiction Psychology Children Social Media Parenting Technology
- Context Type
- Opinion
- AI Confidence Score
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1.000
- Context Details
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{ "tone": "informative", "perspective": "analytical", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes" ] }
Source Information
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- Overall Status
-
Completed
- Submitted By
- Donato V. Pompo
- Submission Date
- February 16, 2026 at 1:32 PM
- Metadata
-
{ "source_type": "extension", "content_hash": "06a1a1337b017c74ce1b48c34f529bf4e77b9cba1688fab5d2c350818f6b5c49", "submitted_via": "chrome_extension", "extension_version": "1.0.18", "original_url": "https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/02\/16\/opinion\/phone-fixation-dopamine-kids.html?campaign_id=9&emc=edit_nn_20260216&instance_id=171166&nl=the-morning®i_id=122976029&segment_id=215349&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337", "parsed_content": "AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTOpinionSupported bySKIP ADVERTISEMENTGuest EssayWhat Pigeons Can Teach Us About Our Phone FixationFeb. 16, 2026, 5:02 a.m. ETVideoCreditCredit...Christa JarroldListen to this article \u00b7 5:12 min Learn moreShare full articleBy Michaeleen DoucleffMs. Doucleff is the author of the forthcoming book \u201cDopamine Kids: A Science-Based Plan to Rewire Your Child\u2019s Brain and Take Back Your Family in the Age of Screens and Ultraprocessed Foods.\u201dMore than 50 years ago, psychologists began documenting a strange phenomenon among animals, including pigeons, raccoons and rats. Although they didn\u2019t realize it at the time, this behavior would help to explain why our society has developed such an intense and often uncontrollable need for our phones. And how devices and their apps don\u2019t give us \u201cinstant gratification,\u201d as we often believe, but instead trigger the opposite: constant wanting and desire.In the 1970s, scientists put hungry pigeons into a long box and taught the birds that a flashing light at one end of the box signified the appearance of food at the other end of the box. The light became a signal for a reward.At first, the pigeons largely ignored the light and spent time at the side of the box near the food. They wanted and needed the food. But over time, the light drew the pigeons to it like a magnet. \u201cIt was amazing to watch,\u201d says psychologist Robert Boakes at The University of Sydney, who was among the first scientists to document this phenomenon. \u201cThe birds would spend so much time pecking at the light that they had no time to get the food.\u201d Mr. Boakes called this behavior \u201csign tracking\u201d because the animals chased after the \u201csign\u201d of the reward. Peck, peck, peck.In one experiment, a pigeon pecked the light thousands of times an hour. The light distracted the birds so much that they went hungry.AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTHow silly of these birds!Today, nearly everyone in America has become just as silly. People are \u201cexactly like the pigeons,\u201d says Peter Balsam, a professor of psychology at Columbia University. Because, he says, we carry around a device that elicits this bizarre behavior: our phones. Swipe, swipe, swipe. Scroll, scroll, scroll. Tap, tap, tap.Sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter Get expert analysis of the news and a guide to the big ideas shaping the world every weekday morning. Get it sent to your inbox.Smartphones \u2014 as well as their social media platforms, texting apps and video games \u2014 can trick us into no longer seeking out what we need in our lives. We start to value, desire and even become obsessed with signals on our devices that we associate with our fundamental needs, like belonging. \u201cAs social creatures, people are driven to find social interaction just as compelling as food, water, sex and salt,\u201d says the neuroscientist Read Montague at Virginia Tech.Phones, tablets and apps provide a cornucopia of sights and sounds that signal the possibility of belonging, much as the light signaled food in the pigeon\u2019s box. These signals include the colorful icons of apps, the red notification dots on top of them, and the bells, chirps, buzzes and dings that accompany them all. Even the device itself morphs into a potent signal for people.Neuroscientists have found that the brain chemical dopamine draws us to these signals. Dopamine was once believed to encode pleasure, but a vast amount of evidence accumulated over recent decades suggests that\u2019s not quite right. Instead, it plays several roles. It triggers motivation for and wanting of fundamental needs. It makes you want the cake in front of you, said neuroscientist Kent Berridge at the University of Michigan. But it doesn\u2019t make you like the cake or feel satisfied afterward. Dopamine isn\u2019t about gratification. Wanting and liking are, in a way, separable components inside the brain, he adds.The dopamine system also identifies signals in our environment that point to and predict the arrival of these critical needs. It lights up when you see the logo of the cake bakery down the street, or when you see your phone sitting on your desk.AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTWhat many parents may not appreciate, Dr. Montague says, is that the content on social media and texting apps is a mere signal of belonging. It cannot fulfill a child\u2019s need for in-person interactions and relationships. Instead, it represents a kind of \u201cskeletal\u201d version of a real social life, he says. One that can \u201csqueeze out\u201d a child\u2019s real social life.To protect our children (and ourselves) from these powerful signals, he says, we need to create times and places in our lives where devices, apps and games aren\u2019t simply limited, but unavailable. Children need sanctuaries in their lives where activities that do fulfill their needs can flourish. For example, Dr. Montague has long had a rule that his teenage children can only use their phones in places where the family congregates, like the kitchen, never upstairs in their bedrooms.When children have an intense desire for these products, it doesn\u2019t always mean they\u2019re deriving intense pleasure and satisfaction from them. In fact, these technologies can strip away pleasure and leave children with little gratification.Cutting off access doesn\u2019t mean depriving or denying children pleasure in life. It can actually mean the opposite. If we seek out and provide children with activities that bring them satisfaction, then we can fill their lives with long-term pleasure while also genuinely meeting their needs.Dr. Montague explains to his teenage children how sitting in your room alone taking selfies actually hinders you from satisfying your need for social connection. \u201cI\u2019m like, \u2018How is that cool? That seems pathetic and lonely. Go out and introduce yourself to real people.\u2019\u201dMichaeleen Doucleff, a science journalist, is the author of \u201cHunt, Gather, Parent\u201d and the forthcoming book \u201cDopamine Kids.\u201dThe Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We\u2019d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here\u2019s our email: letters@nytimes.com.Follow the New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Bluesky, WhatsApp and Threads.Share full articleRelated ContentAdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENT", "ai_headline": "What Pigeons Can Teach Us About Our Phone Fixation", "ai_simplified_title": "Doucleff Explains Phone Fixation Using Pigeon Behavior", "ai_excerpt": "This opinion piece discusses how smartphones trigger a dopamine response similar to how pigeons are drawn to a light signaling food. It argues that phones create a constant desire, not gratification, and can hinder real social connection. The author suggests limiting device access to protect children.", "ai_subject_tags": [ "Smartphones", "Dopamine", "Addiction", "Psychology", "Children", "Social Media", "Parenting", "Technology" ], "ai_context_type": "Opinion", "ai_context_details": { "tone": "informative", "perspective": "analytical", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes" ] }, "ai_source_vector": null, "ai_confidence_score": 0.9999999999999999, "ai_extraction_metadata": { "extracted_at": "2026-02-20T00:03:59.885574Z", "ai_model": "gemini-2.0-flash-lite", "extraction_method": "automated", "content_length": 6368, "url": "https:\/\/nytimes.com\/2026\/02\/16\/opinion\/phone-fixation-dopamine-kids.html", "existing_metadata": { "author_name": null, "published_at": null, "domain_name": null, "site_name": null, "section": null, "publisher": null } } } - Database ID
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- UUID
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- Created At
- February 16, 2026 at 1:32 PM
- Updated At
- February 20, 2026 at 12:04 AM
- AI Extraction Metadata
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AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTOpinionSupported bySKIP ADVERTISEMENTGuest EssayWhat Pigeons Can Teach Us About Our Phone FixationFeb. 16, 2026, 5:02 a.m. ETVideoCreditCredit...Christa JarroldListen to this article Β· 5:12 min Learn moreShare full articleBy Michaeleen DoucleffMs. Doucleff is the author of the forthcoming book βDopamine Kids: A Science-Based Plan to Rewire Your Childβs Brain and Take Back Your Family in the Age of Screens and Ultraprocessed Foods.βMore than 50 years ago, psychologists began documenting a strange phenomenon among animals, including pigeons, raccoons and rats. Although they didnβt realize it at the time, this behavior would help to explain why our society has developed such an intense and often uncontrollable need for our phones. And how devices and their apps donβt give us βinstant gratification,β as we often believe, but instead trigger the opposite: constant wanting and desire.In the 1970s, scientists put hungry pigeons into a long box and taught the bir...
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Completed Started: Feb 20, 2026 12:02 AM Completed: Feb 20, 2026 12:04 AM
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Claims from this Source (23)
All claims extracted from this source document.
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Psychology , Animals π a11f0454-5282-4f03-b964-9bba4d48bc16Simplified: Psychologists documented a strange phenomenon among animals including pigeons raccoons and rats more than 50 years ago
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Technology , Psychology π a11f0454-c906-43e8-a391-f64716abc347Simplified: Smartphones can trick us into no longer seeking out what we need
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Simplified: We start to value desire and become obsessed with signals on our devices that we associate with our fundamental needs
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π€ Read Montague π Opinion Article π·οΈ Psychology π a11f0454-ec4d-488f-b7a2-05ba9e9f9ba5Simplified: People are driven to find social interaction just as compelling as food water sex and salt
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Technology , Psychology π a11f0455-0785-4dc3-98ca-52bf304f6c11Simplified: The device itself morphs into a potent signal for people
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Science , Psychology π a11f0455-25f5-44c9-a64f-6dde1d0456afSimplified: The brain chemical dopamine draws us to these signals
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Science , Psychology π a11f0455-3d79-4cf4-b6de-a40b79c1b3e8Simplified: Dopamine was once believed to encode pleasure but evidence suggests that is not quite right
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Science , Psychology π a11f0455-4f0e-4f5c-8cb0-b2ff2b6e3f48Simplified: Dopamine triggers motivation for and wanting of fundamental needs
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π€ Kent Berridge π Opinion Article π·οΈ Science , Psychology π a11f0455-610d-434a-ae80-a474c6a145f9Simplified: Dopamine makes you want the cake in front of you according to Kent Berridge
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Science , Psychology π a11f0455-7838-4ca1-9995-87900b660110Simplified: Wanting and liking are separable components inside the brain
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Science , Psychology π a11f0455-8f29-44ce-8a94-dc1a3d4b4d21Simplified: The dopamine system lights up when you see the logo of the cake bakery or your phone
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π€ Dr. Montague π Opinion Article π·οΈ Technology , Psychology π a11f0455-a920-4c4c-a9e4-86f0a06d5046Simplified: Content on social media and texting apps cannot fulfill a childβs need for in-person interactions and relationships
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π€ Dr. Montague π Opinion Article π·οΈ Technology , Psychology π a11f0455-ba39-4550-8ffb-4ea24446ddbaSimplified: Content on social media and texting apps represents a skeletal version of a real social life
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π€ Dr. Montague π Opinion Article π·οΈ Technology , Psychology π a11f0455-d0c9-4209-84ec-5c0acfaaa2bbSimplified: Create times and places where devices apps and games are unavailable
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Children need sanctuaries in their lives where activities that do fulfill their needs can flourish.0.900Simplified: Children need sanctuaries where activities that fulfill their needs can flourish
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π€ Dr. Montague π Opinion Article π·οΈ Family , Technology π a11f0455-f1d9-4ad5-8e03-7cbf43715ba2Simplified: Dr. Montague has a rule that his teenage children can only use phones in places where the family congregates
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π€ The author π Opinion Article π·οΈ Technology , Psychology π a11f0456-02a1-4c28-a681-a8177d70e9daSimplified: Technologies can strip away pleasure and leave children with little gratification
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π€ Dr. Montague π Opinion Article π·οΈ Psychology , Social Media π a11f0456-1838-40fd-8729-9dc48e6fe4c6Simplified: Sitting in your room alone taking selfies hinders you from satisfying your need for social connection
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Simplified: Share your thoughts about articles
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Here are some tips.0.950Simplified: Here are some tips
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Simplified: Let us know at corrections@nytimescom if you spot an error
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Follow the New York Times Opinion section on Facebook Instagram TikTok Bluesky WhatsApp and Threads.0.950π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Social Media , News π a1161a18-e2ce-41b9-9098-24167cde5978Simplified: Follow the New York Times Opinion section on Facebook Instagram TikTok Bluesky WhatsApp and Threads