The Death of Serendipity: What Algorithmic Personalization Is Doing to Your Mind

The Cost of Losing Serendipity in Algorithmic Discovery

Host Leslie Poston discusses how algorithmic recommendation systems have replaced everyday accidental discovery, reducing serendipity and narrowing what people encounter. The episode explains psychological and neuroscience research showing novelty’s role in motivation, attention, learning, and memory (including locus coeruleus activation), the inverted-U relationship between complexity and curiosity, and how habituation can flatten engagement when stimuli stay too familiar. Poston contrasts this with the mere exposure effect (Zajonc) and processing fluency, arguing platforms reinforce and shape preferences through repeated exposure, producing “adjacent novelty” rather than true surprise. She links personalization to self-concept via the looking-glass self and self-perception theory, describing identity-shaping pipelines, and argues personalization reduces shared cultural overlap, contributing to epistemological fragmentation. Practical suggestions include turning off autoplay, browsing physical spaces, reading outside one’s interests, and holding preferences lightly to preserve room for the unexpected.

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00:00 Welcome and Setup
01:16 What Serendipity Means
02:03 From Browsing to Algorithms
03:10 Novelty and Learning Science
05:12 Mere Exposure and Reinforced Taste
07:48 Adjacent Novelty Trap
09:29 Algorithms and Identity Mirrors
11:55 Shared Culture and Fragmentation
13:33 Agency and Slow Effects
16:37 Reclaiming the Unexpected
18:34 Closing Thoughts
19:19 Outro and Subscribe
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The Death of Serendipity: What Algorithmic Personalization Is Doing to Your Mind
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