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Using AI at work is causing ‘brain fry,’ researchers say

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Door Anoniem

Gemaakt March 09, 2026|2 minuten leestijd
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Researchers found that some workers using AI in their roles reported a “mental hangover” with a “fog” that caused difficulty focusing.

Excessive use and oversight of artificial intelligence tools in the workplace may cause “AI brain fry,” according to researchers from Boston Consulting Group and the University of California.

Workers who are using AI tools report that the technology is “intensifying rather than simplifying work,” researchers wrote in the Harvard Business Review on Friday.

A study of nearly 1,500 full-time US workers found 14% said they had experienced “mental fatigue that results from excessive use of, interaction with, and/or oversight of AI tools beyond one’s cognitive capacity,” or what the researchers called “AI brain fry.”

Respondents described having a “mental hangover” with a “fog” or “buzzing” and an inability to think clearly, along with headaches, slower decision-making, and difficulty focusing.

AI companies have pushed their products as a productivity booster, allowing workers to offload some or part of their workloads, a message that some companies have taken on and started to measure AI use as a performance metric.

Crypto exchange Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has said he fired engineers who didn’t want to use AI, and set a goal late last year to have AI generate half of the platform’s code.

“As enterprises use more multi-agent systems, employees find themselves toggling between more tools,” the researchers wrote. “Contrary to the promise of havingmore time to focus on meaningful work, juggling and multitasking can become the definitive features of working with AI.”

The researchers said this AI-induced mental strain “carries significant costs in the form of increased employee errors, decision fatigue, and intention to quit.”

Study respondents who said they had brain fry experienced 33% more decision fatigue compared to those who didn’t, which researchers said could cost large companies millions of dollars a year. Those with AI brain fry were also around 40% more likely to have an active intent to quit.

Those reporting AI brain fry also self-reported making nearly 40% more major errors than those who did not, with a major error defined as one with “serious consequences, such as those that could affect safety, outcomes, or important decisions.” 

The researchers found, however, that the use of AI to replace repetitive and routine tasks decreased burnout, a state of chronic workplace stress that leads to negative feelings about the job and decreased effectiveness.

Related: Anthropic reopens Pentagon talks as tech groups push Trump to drop risk tag

Respondents who used AI to reduce time spent on routine and repetitive tasks reported their levels of burnout were 15% lower than those who didn’t use AI in such a way.

The researchers said company leaders looking to reduce AI brain fry should “clearly define AI’s purpose in the organization” and explain how workloads will change with the tool.

Companies should also stick to “measurable outcomes” for AI, as “incentivizing quantity of use will lead to waste, low-quality work, and unnecessary mental strain.”

AI Eye: IronClaw rivals OpenClaw, Olas launches bots for Polymarket

Source: CoinTelegraph


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