Watching short, fragmented videos rather than a single continuous video reduces memory recall and changes the way the brain searches for information. Recent experiments have shown that fast-paced, episodic media formats disrupt the neural systems that integrate details and maintain cognitive control. These results were published in the academic journal “NPJ Science of Learning.”
Media consumption has dramatically shifted towards bite-sized content on platforms like TikTok and Instagram. This explosion of fast-paced entertainment has sparked intense public debate about its effects on the human psyche. Recently, the term “brain rot” has become widely recognized to describe the mental exhaustion associated with endlessly scrolling through uninterrupted clips. This phenomenon has led parents and policymakers to question whether modern internet platforms are structurally altering human cognition.
Psychologists and educators are particularly interested in how this type of media affects memory retention and focused learning. These days, many schools and training programs are adopting short instructional videos to increase student engagement. Despite the popularity of these microlearning tools, research shows a conflicting picture about their psychological benefits. Some data suggests that short videos can help keep viewers motivated and teach simple steps.
Other research has linked high levels of exposure to short-form media to deficits in working memory and decreased attention span. Watching short videos requires constant context switching. Viewers jump from one topic or setting to another. This speed of rotation can make it difficult for your brain to build a strong, unified memory of what you just saw. Continuous stories usually help the mind connect new facts into easily searchable mental packages.
To understand exactly how video format changes memory processes, researchers set up a brain imaging experiment. Meiting Wei, a psychology researcher affiliated with Yunnan Normal University and Central China Normal University, led the study. Wei and his team of colleagues wanted to look at what happens in the brain when people try to remember information they’ve just learned from continuous or disparate media. They focused precisely on the neural activity that occurs during the process of memory retrieval.
The research team recruited 57 university students for the experiment. They screened participants to ensure that none showed signs of clinical media addiction or pre-existing mental health conditions. The researchers randomly divided the volunteers into two different groups. One group watched a single continuous 10-minute video about a relatively unknown tourist destination.
The second group watched a series of seven short videos, also totaling 10 minutes. The researchers specifically matched the content of these short videos with longer videos. Both groups heard and saw the same core information and the same total number of words. The only difference was the delivery format.
The short video group experienced narrative breaks and scene transitions to mimic the experience of scrolling through a social media feed. Immediately after the observation session, participants underwent a memory test while lying in a functional magnetic resonance imaging machine. The device uses magnetic fields and radio waves to detect changes in blood flow, revealing which areas of the brain are most active at any given moment. Active brain cells consume more oxygen, so tracking this blood supply allows scientists to map cognitive tasks in real time.
The scanner recorded participants’ brain activity as they answered multiple-choice questions on the video. They looked at the questions on the screen and answered using a hand-held button device. Behavioral results revealed clear differences in memory performance between the two test conditions.
Participants who watched a long series of videos answered approximately 66% of the questions correctly. Participants in the short video group answered only 43% of the questions correctly. Viewing fragmented videos significantly impaired participants’ ability to accurately recall facts. The constant interruptions appeared to prevent the basic formation of reliable memory traces.
In the brain, imaging data matched these behavioral differences. The short video group showed abnormally low activation in three different brain regions during the memory test. One of these areas is the left anterior chamber. The pretectum is a thin sheet of neurons that helps coordinate network signals across different parts of the brain.
Occlusion plays an important role in focusing attention and combining different sensory details into a single conscious memory. The reduction in activity here suggests that viewers are having a hard time reconstructing a coherent mental image of what they were seeing. Because the initial learning was chopped into discrete pieces, it was difficult for the brain to integrate the pieces during testing.
The researchers also observed reduced activation in the left caudate nucleus among short video viewers. The caudate nucleus is a structure located deep in the brain that controls goal-directed behavior. This helps individuals stay focused on the task and organize information to find the right answer. This region is closely related to how the brain processes rewards and intrinsic motivation during learning tasks.
Reduced activity in this region suggests that rapid scene changes fail to provide the stable mental cues needed to actively search memory banks. Instead of searching efficiently, the brain may have to rely on passive guessing strategies. Continuous stories provide a strong sense of knowing, which may cause stronger cognitive motivation and better activation of the caudate nucleus.
A third region, known as the left middle temporal gyrus, also had decreased activity in the short video group. This section of the brain handles language processing and helps us understand the deeper meaning of a subject. When people connect a particular word to a broader concept, they typically see an increase in blood flow in this brain region. Low activation indicates that fragmented input impairs the participant’s ability to process the overall narrative of the video content.
The researchers also looked at how well different parts of the brain communicate with each other. They found that the connection between the caudate and pretectum was weaker in the short video group. This reduction in network connectivity indicates a breakdown in how the brain couples executive control and information integration. If the learning format is highly fragmented, the neural networks needed to put the information back together won’t synchronize efficiently.
Participants also filled out a questionnaire detailing their daily short video viewing habits. The researchers looked to see if these habits were related to brain activity during the test. For individuals in the short video group, higher scores on a scale measuring failure of self-control correlated with stronger connections between the caudate and forelimbs.
The researchers interpreted this abnormal relationship as a sign of an overworked nervous system. People who have trouble controlling their media habits may need to expend extra brain effort just to recall basic memories. This increased connectivity may represent strained adaptation rather than a sign of superior mental processing. Because the learning content is disjointed, the entire system operates at low efficiency.
The researchers acknowledged that the current experiment had some limitations. The participants consisted only of relatively young university students. Children and older adults may process fragmented video content differently.
Although the team matched the video formats in terms of length and information density, they were not able to completely equalize the narrative flow between the two styles. Short videos inherently have a choppy rhythm, making it difficult to fully compare them to seamless documentaries. The research design also placed different people in the two viewing groups.
Future studies may test the same individuals in both formats to eliminate baseline differences in memory capacity. By observing the same brain in both tasks, scientists were able to collect more precise physiological measurements. The researchers noted that while brain scans capture simultaneous activity, they cannot rigorously prove the exact order of biological events. Expanding this study with a larger sample size could provide clearer answers about how changes in media formats fundamentally reshape human learning capabilities over time.
The study, “Fragmented learning from short videos modulates neural activity and connectivity during memory retrieval,” was authored by Meiting Wei, Jiang Liu, Huabin Wang, QinXuan Li, and Guang-Heng Dong.

