Notes on an attention economy

Posted on August 24, 2009 by admin

Michael Erard’s “A Short Manifesto on the Future of Attention” reiterates Herbert Simon’s 1971 prediction of an attention shortage: “What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients,” and asks what an attention economy would really look like. Apart from some extremely dubious Ronald Reagan worship, the article is a fascinating read.

I imagine attention festivals: week-long multimedia, cross-industry carnivals of readings, installations, and performances, where you go from a tent with 30-second films, guitar solos, 10-minute video games, and haiku to the tent with only Andy Warhol movies, to a myriad of venues with other media forms and activities requiring other attention lengths. In the Nano Tent, you can hear ringtones and read tweets. A festival organized not by the forms of the commodities themselves but of the experience of interacting with them. Not organized by time elapsed, but by cognitive investment: a pop song, which goes by quickly, can resonate for days; a poem, which can go by more quickly, sticks through a season. A festival in which you can see images of your brain on knitting and on Twitter.

I imagine a retail sector for cultural products that’s organized around the attention span: not around “books” or “music” but around short stories and pop songs in one aisle, poems and arias in the other. In the long store: 5,000 piece jigsaw puzzles, big novels, beer brewing equipment, DVDs of The Wire. Clerks could suggest and build attentional menus. We would develop attentional connoisseurship: the right pairings of the short and long. We would understand, and promote, attentional health.

A Short Manifesto on the Future of Attention

(via Futurismic)

 Notes on an attention economy
 Notes on an attention economy

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