一位心理学家指出,人们拍的照片越多,他们感受和体验的就越少,对拍照目标的细节也记得越模糊,她将其称为“拍照效应”。 她说,在公园里给孩子拍照的那些家长,其实当时“更不关心”孩子,因为他们正在关心拍照这件事。结果,这些父母“失去了”拍照的那些时光。 “按下快门的那刻,就好像是你把自己的记忆力外包给了相机。每当我们使用这些记忆设备时,就会减少自己的思想认知,从而不能帮助我们真正记住事物。” Los Angeles blogger Rebecca Woolf uses her blog, as a window into her family's life. Naturally, it includes oodles of pictures of her four children. She says she's probably taken tens of thousands of photos since her oldest child was born. And she remembers the moment when it suddenly clicked — if you will — that she was too absorbed in digital documentation. "I remember going to the park at one point, and looking around ... and seeing that everyone was on their phones ... not taking photographs, but just — they had a device in their hands," she recalls. "I was like, 'Oh, God, wait. Is this what it looks like?' " she says. "Even if it's just a camera, is this how people see me? ... Are [my kids] going to think of me as somebody who was behind a camera?" Today, Woolf still takes plenty of pictures, but she tries to not let the camera get in the middle of a moment, she says. |