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- Friday Coffee with MAP – July 18, 2025
Friday Coffee with MAP – July 18, 2025
"5 Ways To Use AI—Without Surrendering Your Brain"
Hello , and welcome to Friday Coffee with MAP!
Like it or not, Artificial Intelligence is increasingly prevalent in the contemporary workplace. Tools like ChatGPT or Google Gemini are offering incredible support in workplace tasks—drafting emails, summarizing long documents, generating reports, and even helping brainstorm ideas or troubleshoot problems. With this potential comes the threat of over-reliance, and concerns are mounting about long-term impact over use of AI tools can have on one’s cognitive function.
Research suggests that becoming too dependent on AI tools– particularly those that compose writing or perform analysis– can weaken the brain’s ability to perform critical tasks. The brain is like a muscle. It loses strength when we stop using it.
So, how can we harness the power of AI without compromising our mental acuity? This week’s piece, written by a digital forensics expert who has witnessed technology’s transformative effects across industries, shares practical strategies for preserving cognitive health without completely foregoing AI’s incredible potential.
Happy reading!
“5 Ways To Use AI—Without Surrendering Your Brain”
by Lars Daniel for Forbes
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When you ask AI to perform a task (such as composing an email) you are performing what psychologists call “cognitive offloading.” Studies have shown that people who do too much cognitive offloading experience decreased hippocampal activity and spatial memory.
The bottom line: if you outsource your brain’s work, your brain’s functionality will decrease. Here are 5 ways to actively & intentionally combat this process, without losing out on the potential benefits AI presents for efficiency and optimization.
Learn to be ‘bored’ before using AI: Constant stimulation is unhealthy. Do not let AI’s access to unlimited, instant information eliminate your quiet, reflective thought. Instead of using AI tools to compose everything you write, take a moment to write things out by hand, brainstorm away from your screen. Actively maintain your brain’s ability to “be quiet.”
Use AI to create your own learning ladders: When exploring a new topic or skill with AI, use it not just to simplify, but to explore new, increasingly complex topics. Use it to compound your learning, starting with a beginner-level explanation, then progress to intermediate and advanced levels. You can even ask AI to test you on what you’ve learned.
Use AI for scaffolding and not solutions: No matter how advanced AI tools become, it will not have nuanced understanding of every personal, individual problem you encounter. Stop short of asking it for definitive answers to your problems; instead, rely on it to build frameworks that organize information and reveal connections that help you to a solution. Ask for structured outlines or visual maps to clarify key considerations and decision points, then work through each element independently using that structure as a guide.
Make AI your intellectual sparring partner: By actively challenging AI’s responses when you ask it questions, you can use it to sharpen your thinking. Once you've formed your own view on a topic, ask your AI client for the strongest counterarguments, explore multiple alternative approaches, and have AI play devil’s advocate to test your conclusions—then assess its critiques to refine your ideas further. This will help you maintain a level of engaged, critical thinking.
Maintain AI-free time blocks: Enhance your use of AI by being intentional about when not to use it. Create first drafts of creative or analytical work on your own, without use of AI. Take regular “thinking walks” free from devices, and practice your own skills of recall. These habits help keep your core brain function sharp while still using AI where it adds the most value.
We urge you to learn more about AI’s possibilities on your own– but remember: despite their potential, they come with clear cognitive cost. Use these tools to keep your brain at full potential as these tools continue to develop.
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So tell us: We’re interested to hear about your use of AI tools in your day-to-day life. How have you adopted these tools, and have you recognized any changes in your cognitive processes since doing so? If you are unfamiliar, are you interested in learning more?
Thank you,
The MAP Team
MAP Strategic Wealth Advisors | A Member of Advisory Services Network, LLC
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Los Angeles, CA 90064
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