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Information Overload

Written By Nick Hodge

Posted April 6, 2012

There is such a thing as information overload.

And in this high-speed digital age, I think we’re all affected by it in some way.

On more than a few occasions lately, I’ve heard this sentiment echoed in various ways…

The first came from an essay simply titled “Avoid News” by Rolf Dobelli, a Swiss novelist and entrepreneur who also has a show on Bloomberg in Germany.

His take is that “news is to the mind what sugar is to the body.”

By trying to consume so many fleeting headlines we get distracted, stifle critical thinking, and fill ourselves with anxiety and despair.

Oakland shooting. Treyvon Martin. Tornadoes. Syria. Iran. Obamacare. Primaries. Debates. GDP. Unemployment. And on. And on. And on.

News today is meant to generate a click on a website — not to inform you of the nuances of the situations, dive into the backstories, or deliver hard-hitting follow-ups.

And in most cases, none of the “news” has a direct impact on your life, your decision-making, or your bottom line.

I’d submit it’s not even news; it’s hyped-up sideshow stuff needed to fill the space created by a 24-hour news cycle and pay-per-click advertising.

Pope Visits Communist Cuba.

That doesn’t impact my existence — and frankly, I don’t care.

Missing Something

Don’t worry about missing something, Dobelli says.

If something truly noteworthy happens, you’ll hear about it.

But most of the time, there isn’t anything to miss.

The important stuff is the causation, the way different stories are related, and the way events touch our lives independently.

And you aren’t getting that from a staff writer at the Associated Press or from the middle-aged women wearing too much makeup who warn you about the one thing in your pantry that could kill you, but won’t tell you more until you tune it at 11 to watch the advertisements.

What’s worse, instead of just reporting, they try to rationalize and justify…

Oil Down on Inventories. Oil Up on Jobless Claims. Oil Flat on Retail Sales.

Give me a break. If they knew why oil was up or down, they wouldn’t be writing news stories for $40k a year. They have an undergrad degree in journalism, not quite the market intuition of a billionaire fund manager.

As Dobelli says, “Any journalist who writes, ‘The market moved because of X’ or ‘The company went bankrupt because of Y’ is an idiot.”

He recommends abandoning newspapers, the evening news, news websites, and news apps, and instead reading long-form essays, editorials, and books.

The purpose of “news” in the modern era is to sound urgent and important. Most of it is not.

Evidence

Cook County Hospital in Chicago is the basis for the hit TV show ER.

In the late 1990s, it started changing the way it diagnosed heart attacks…

Instead of considering all factors — age, medical history, smoking, exercise, etc. — and then allowing the doctor to make a diagnosis, the hospital decided to look at only four factors: the ECG, presence of angina, fluid in lungs, and blood pressure.

It didn’t matter if the patient was a 60-year-old pack-a-day smoker or a 25-year-old long-distance runner.

Then the hospital did a two-year test. Part of the time doctors tried to diagnose heart attacks on their own using all available information; part of the time they would look only at the four factors I described above.

You can probably guess who won by the point of this article…

Doctors got it right between 79% and 89% of the time.

The four factors got it right more than 95% of the time.

Here’s Malcolm Gladwell, who wrote about this event in his book Blink:

Why is the Cook County experiment so important? Because we take it, as a given, that the more information decision makers have, the better off they are. If the specialist we are seeing says she needs to do more tests or examine us in more detail, few of us think that’s a bad idea… All that extra information isn’t actually an advantage at all… in fact, you need to know very little to find the underlying signature of a complex phenomenon. That extra information is more than useless. It’s harmful. It confuses the issues.

What screws up doctors when they are trying to predict heart attacks is that they take too much information into account.

It isn’t intuitive, but it’s correct.

Imagine how hard it was to convince the country’s doctors that three questions could diagnose a heart attack better than their years of education, training, and full information on the patient.

But guess what?

Cook County is now one of the preeminent hospitals in the country for diagnosing chest pain.

And just this week, a group of nine specialty medical boards — from oncology to cardiology — recommended doctors perform 45 common tests less often.

Eight others will soon follow suit, and the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation in conjunction with Consumer Reports is launching an educational campaign aimed at showing doctors and patients that less information can indeed be more.

Tune It Out

I’ve urged you many times to ‘tune out the noise.’

From Toddlers and Tiaras to the daily infights of our Congress, much of the stuff that overloads our senses is impertinent.

I spent the past few days fishing in the Keys. I hardly read any news, financial or otherwise…

And I felt more in tune than I had in months.

So take a break. Tune it out. And try to hone in on what really matters — and has bearing on your life.

Call it like you see it,

Nick Hodge Signature

Nick Hodge

follow basic@nickchodge on Twitter

Nick is the founder and president of the Outsider Club, and the investment director of the thousands-strong stock advisories, Early Advantage and Wall Street’s Underground Profits. He also heads Nick’s Notebook, a private placement and alert service that has raised tens of millions of dollars of investment capital for resource, energy, cannabis, and medical technology companies. Co-author of two best-selling investment books, including Energy Investing for Dummies, his insights have been shared on news programs and in magazines and newspapers around the world. For more on Nick, take a look at his editor’s page.

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