Behavior : All Tech Considered Tracking how technology — from the simplest tools like pencils, to the most advanced artificial intelligence — is affecting and changing our individual habits, but also group behavior and society.
All Tech Considered

All Tech Considered

Tech, Culture and Connection

Behavior

Friday

Monday

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A Good IT Person Needs To Be Half Technologist, Half Psychologist

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Thursday

Tuesday

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Do Feelings Compute? If Not, The Turing Test Doesn't Mean Much

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Sunday

Twenty-nine percent of all cellphone owners described their phone as "something they can't imagine living without," according to a Pew Research Center survey. iStockphoto hide caption

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iStockphoto

Monday

Thursday

Driving while distracted by your phone is a nationwide problem. A new proposed phone function from Apple could play a big role in helping teens — and adults — avoid accidents. Nils Kahle/iStockphoto hide caption

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Nils Kahle/iStockphoto

Monday

Courtney Cranch tends bar at The Red Hen in Washington, D.C., where she estimates at least half her customers have smartphones out at mealtime. Elise Hu/NPR hide caption

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Elise Hu/NPR

Restaurants: The Modern-Day Lab For Our Smartphone-Obsessed Ways

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Thursday

"We saw a lot of customers come in, look for a table, not find one and leave," owner Jodi Whalen says. "It was money flowing out the door for us." Annie Russell/VPR hide caption

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Annie Russell/VPR

No Laptops, No Wi-Fi: How One Cafe Fired Up Sales

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Tuesday

Remember these? Some of you have gone back to — or stayed with — the flip phone to avoid getting too attached to smartphones and their capabilities. Koichi Kamoshida/Getty Images hide caption

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Koichi Kamoshida/Getty Images

Thursday

Wednesday

Monday

Monday

Expect Labs' MindMeld app uses predictive computing to push information to us, instead of us having to ask. Courtesy of Expect Labs hide caption

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Courtesy of Expect Labs

Computers That Know What You Need, Before You Ask

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