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Is AI productivity prompting burnout? Study finds new pattern of AI brain fry

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The promise of artificial intelligence has been simple: let the machines do the work. Instead, it may be creating a new headache from babysitting the machines. A new study published in Harvard Business Review suggests that instead of making work easier, AI may be giving some workers what researchers are calling “brain fry.”

Researchers surveyed about 1,500 workers and found that people constantly bouncing between multiple AI tools reported more decision fatigue and more errors. About one in seven workers said they had experienced mental fatigue from juggling AI tools at work.

“The AI can run out far ahead of us, but we’re still here with the same brain we had yesterday,” said Julie Bedard, managing director and partner at Boston Consulting Group and an author of the study. She told CBS News the findings are an “early warning sign” that expectations around AI productivity may need recalibrating.

“AI is really good in some ways for work. And in other ways, it gives us pause in how we do our work,” Bedard said. “Specifically, there are ways in which intensive oversight of AI causes a lot of sort of cognitive, just exhaustion.”

The study found a striking paradox: AI can both reduce burnout and create it.

When workers had to constantly supervise multiple AI systems or juggle several tools at once, mental strain increased sharply. By contrast, when workers used AI to actually offload repetitive tasks, their stress levels dropped.

Bedard explained that AI “allows us to really extend our capabilities, basically extending our workload and our sphere of accountability at work,” and that expansion of capability can quickly become overwhelming.

“AI brain fry causes a lot of mental fatigue so we feel like it’s beyond our brain’s capability to handle those tasks,” she said.

For people working deeply with AI tools, the concept of “brain fry” resonates.

“There’s a point that usually happens after a full day where I just kind of feel exhausted in a way that I didn’t feel in a normal work day before AI,” said Jack Downey, Head of Strategy, Operations and Product at Webster Pass Consulting. He uses AI daily to build automation systems and finds there is an additional mental strain that comes from AI workflows.

“While the technology expands what workers can do, it also expands what they’re expected to do, even if that expectation is internally driven,” said Downey.

“Why businesses should pay attention”

For years, many predictions about artificial intelligence suggested the technology would allow fewer workers to do more work faster. But if AI is already pushing workers toward cognitive overload, organizations may need to rethink those assumptions, Bedard said.

“We need to redesign how we do our work—where we don’t just keep exactly what we did yesterday and put AI on the top of it,” she said.

The study found that leadership and training could play a critical role. Less brain fry was seen among employees whose managers were intentional with their AI use.

If businesses don’t figure that out, their bottom lines may suffer. Workers experiencing AI brain fry reported more mistakes, slower decision-making, and higher fatigue. Bedard is clear that the solution is not abandoning AI, but rethinking how human workers best interact with these tools as the AI revolution accelerates.

The promise of AI may be limitless. The question is how far the human brain can stretch to keep up.

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Rachel Morrison
I’m Rachel Morrison, a journalist covering civic issues and public policy. I earned my Journalism degree from Tulane University. I started reporting in 2016 for NOLA.com, focusing on local government, infrastructure, and disaster recovery. Over the years, I have worked on investigative features examining how policy decisions affect everyday residents. I’m committed to clear, responsible reporting that strengthens public understanding.