A new MIT study just dropped a serious bombshell: students who used ChatGPT to write essays showed weaker brain activity and poorer memory compared to those writing on their own or using good old Google.
Yes, it’s fast. Yes, it writes well.
But it might be messing with your mind.
What the Study Did
Researchers tracked 54 students from the Boston area over four months. The task? Write SAT-style essays.
They split them into three groups:
- One used ChatGPT
- One used Google search
- One wrote with zero tools—just their brain
While they wrote, researchers used EEG scans to monitor brain activity.
Also Read MIT’s SEAL Shocks Scientists – AI Now Teaches Itself, Needs NO Human Help!
What They Found
The ChatGPT group had the lowest brain activity. Weak neural connections. Poor memory retention. Less creative thinking.
In contrast, the group that used no tools at all had the strongest brain signals. Their neural networks lit up in areas tied to creativity, memory, and processing.
Even students using Google outperformed those using ChatGPT—both in brain scans and essay scores.
Why It Matters
This study was small, sure. But the takeaway?
Relying on ChatGPT might come at a cost.
With AI creeping into every part of the education system, this shows a potential danger: early overuse might hurt learning and brain growth.
Today it’s an essay. Tomorrow it might be your ability to think for yourself.
“It’s not just about better writing. It’s about how we learn,” one researcher said.
Our Take
AI isn’t the enemy. But mindless dependence is.
ChatGPT is a tool, not a tutor. If students lean on it too much, they might skip the hard—but important—work of critical thinking and idea building.
We’re pro-tech, but not at the cost of human thought. Especially for students. Especially for the next generation of thinkers.
Also Read Midjourney Launches First AI Video Tool, V1, Turning Images Into 5-Second Clips
