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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — The science confirms it: We are more distracted today than at any point in our history.

According to studies from the renowned researcher Gloria Mark of the University of California-Irvine, the average attention span on a digital device has dropped more than 60 percent in just two decades — from 120 seconds in 2004 to less than 45 seconds in 2024. It’s a phenomenon called “popcorn brain,” and it is shared in separate studies by researchers from across the world of academia.

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But the latest challenge of digital decline arrived on television screens on Thursday at the Players Championship in a far different way: through Justin Thomas’s return to the lead after a six-month absence from tournament golf.

“I felt like it really was just all mental,” Thomas said Thursday after an opening-round 68 at the Players Championship. “I had a little bit of fatigue out there. I had a hard time keeping my focus the whole — just like I did going back out after the rain delay. I said to [caddie Matt “Rev” Minister], I was like, I’m very spacey.”

Thomas’ “mental” remark was in reference to his return last week at Bay Hill — more on that in a moment — but his attentional struggles continued on Thursday, and understandably so: The two-time major champ returned to the Players for just his second event since spinal surgery in the offseason that robbed him of the early portion of his season. It’s not hard to imagine how, after spending at least some of his time away from golf enjoying the fruits of the endless scroll, Thomas’ return to the relentless focus of a five-plus-hour tournament round would be a challenge.

At last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational, Thomas showed signs of that struggle, struggling just to break 80 in both rounds of a missed cut en route to last place at the limited field event.

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“Look, I wasn’t expecting to go be in contention and have a chance to win the golf tournament. I fully believed that I could. Like, I was hitting all these shots and doing things well enough to, but I knew it was going to be tough mentally being out there and playing,” he said Thurday. “But when you kind of post two pretty humiliating scores, it’s hard to give yourself too much grace.”

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