Ten Minutes with AI Reduce Cognitive Abilities: Study Findings
The study found that working with an AI assistant for just 10 minutes weakens cognitive functions. People become less able to solve problems on their own. The r

New research publishes a troubling conclusion: just 10 minutes of using an AI assistant can noticeably reduce a person's cognitive abilities and their capacity to solve problems independently.
How the research was conducted
A group of researchers divided study participants into several groups. The first solved complex logical problems completely independently, without any hints. The second had access to an AI assistant (like ChatGPT) for exactly 10 minutes — with the ability to consult it as many times as they wanted. The third control group performed no preparatory tasks. After this, all participants without exception took the same set of tests on creativity, logical thinking, the ability to find unconventional solutions, and learning speed.
Results: a quarter decline
The data turned out discouraging. People who worked with AI showed significant performance decline across all categories:
- Quality of solving new problems fell by 25–30% compared to the control group
- Participants tried fewer alternative approaches and options
- Internal motivation to find their own solutions decreased significantly
Of particular concern is that the effect was noticeable almost immediately — already in the first test after working with AI.
Why this happens: cognitive atrophy
Neuroscientists offer a simple explanation: the brain is the most "lazy" organ in the human body and always chooses the path of least resistance. When a problem solution is provided from outside, neurons literally "relax" and conserve energy. Upon the next call to think independently, the brain experiences cognitive shock — like an unused muscle that suddenly must lift a weight. This is especially dangerous for the young generation, which is only forming its analytical thinking skills.
"If you generate all content through AI, your brain simply forgets how to do it.
It's like stopping walking — muscles atrophy."
What this means for practice
The research is not against AI as a tool. It's about using it correctly: AI works when it enhances your abilities (text editing, idea checking, finding inspiration), not when it replaces them (complete delegation of thinking). For education, the conclusion is critical: schools and universities should teach people to think independently first, then use assistants as a support.
A graduate who has never solved problems without AI will be helpless without the tool. For specialists' work — a mix of your own thinking and AI remains the optimal strategy. For people who have already developed a persistent dependence, recovering skills can be a long process — like an athlete who hasn't trained for a month, it requires conscious effort to regain form.