Feeling stressed or anxious at an inability to access the Internet? Don’t worry, you are not alone and now there’s a word for it; “Discomgoogolation”. Nearly half of Britons (about 45%) are discomgoogolation sufferers, according to a survey with over a quarter (about 28%) admitting to rising stress levels when they are unable to go online.
“The proliferation of broadband has meant for the first time in history we’ve entered a culture of ‘instant answers,’” said psychologist Dr. David Lewis, who identified discomgoogolation by measuring heart rates and brainwave activity. The term comes from “discombobulate,” which means to confuse or frustrated, and Google.
The survey also found 76% of Britons could not live without the internet, with over half of the population using the web between one and four hours a day and 19% of people spending more time online than with their family in a week. 47% of those who polled believed that internet was more important in people’s live than religion, with one in five people paying the internet more attention than their partner. Commissioned by information service 118118, the YouGov poll questioned 2,100 Britons during the first week of July, 2008.
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