The Doomscrolling Effect: Brainrot Habit Simulation
This is not about one bad evening. It shows what repeated short-form doomscrolling can train over months: more daily scrolling, more brainrot habit, and less room left for deep focus.
Simulations that visualize behavioral patterns, social dynamics and societal systems for education and research.
This is not about one bad evening. It shows what repeated short-form doomscrolling can train over months: more daily scrolling, more brainrot habit, and less room left for deep focus.
This widget shows one simple idea: AI may be able to do many tasks, but companies adopt it slowly. As the sim runs, you can see how that delay may affect some jobs, new hiring, and other work signals. It is a simple demo, not a prediction.
Use this base for linked systems where spread depends on connectivity and thresholds. It fits adoption spread, contagion, referral loops, peer influence, cascading failures, information diffusion, trust propagation, and other network effects where local connections shape global outcomes. The template is built to make saturation, resistance, clustering, and tipping points easy to see.
How individual digital habits shape network behavior. Adjust Digital World and Real World entertainment to see how individual habits scale into network-wide shifts — fast enough to feel in ~10 seconds.