With over three and a half million followers, it has tidbits of information about life, entertainment, current events, and history from all eras. We’ve compiled a list of noteworthy images from the page. Scroll through them, and you might find an excellent conversation starter. “Dopamine causes you to want, desire, seek out, and search,” Dr. Weinschenk wrote in an article for Psychology Today. “It increases your general level of arousal and your goal-directed behavior. Dopamine makes you curious about ideas and fuels your searching for information.” “To the brain, information is its own reward, above and beyond whether it’s useful,” he said. “And just as our brains like empty calories from junk food, they can overvalue information that makes us feel good but may not be useful — what some may call idle curiosity.” “We were able to demonstrate for the first time the existence of a common neural code for information and money, which opens the door to a number of exciting questions about how people consume, and sometimes overconsume, information.” “The way our brains respond to the anticipation of a pleasurable reward is an important reason why people are susceptible to clickbait.” “Pick something positive and fun that you can do in 5 minutes every time your most common trigger happens,” he wrote on his website. “That might be: reading a few pages of a novel, journaling, doing pushups, taking a walk, drinking water, meditating, writing, painting, practicing a language, writing a letter with paper and pen, etc.” “Tell everyone you know that you’re not going to check Facebook (for example) within 15 minutes of starting an important work task,” he wrote. “The goal isn’t to eliminate all information sources and be shut off from the online world. It’s not to throw out your iPhone or laptop. These tools are incredibly useful and powerful,” he explains. “The idea is simply not to be controlled by them, and to have a balanced life that includes other activities.” “You might decide to only read 10 really good blogs instead of 50 ones that take up your attention,” Babauta says. “Your attention matters — you should only give it to the things that make your life better.” “This limit allows you to use these tools but also have time for other things, and it forces you to decide what’s important within that limit and to use the limited time efficiently.” Follow Bored Panda on Google News! Follow us on Flipboard.com/@boredpanda! Please use high-res photos without watermarks Ooops! Your image is too large, maximum file size is 8 MB.