Nonsensical dissension aside, I believe there's a very valid point here. I didn't read the entire article, I just read the first sentence under the banner, and I'm inclined to say that I absolutely agree with the premise.
Taking a picture for posterity at a birthday, wedding or concert may harm our ability to remember the event fully, researchers believe in a phenomenon known as 'photo-taking impairment effect'
I've added emphasis to the two pieces that I believe are key here.
I do believe it's possible to photograph an event and still fully participate in and/or experience it, but it takes practice and extra work. I've had the opportunity to shoot a lot of concerts and events around Bethlehem Musikfest and the various Artsquest concerts and festivals in my area, and I have to say that there are shows where I got some great photos of some great artists, but I also have to be honest and say that I
missed a lot in the process of photographing them.
I'm a musician and have been for much longer than I've held a camera. If I think back I
know that there are great moments in that show where I was more invested in capturing a great photo than I was in listening to what the artist was doing. That doesn't mean I didn't enjoy it, but there is definitely stuff I missed because I was checking settings or reviewing the last shot or changing a lens. That doesn't mean I didn't enjoy it. But you cannot be fully invested in a sensory experience when any one of your senses is otherwise distracted.
Can you do both? Absolutely, but only under strict circumstances. I have a rule now for shows that I want to see as much as I want to shoot - one lens, one setting, auto ISO, no peaking. This prevents me from being distracted by the camera in my hands and allows me to shoot without thinking about it to the level of distraction. I will only check photos and make adjustments between songs, and then usually only after the first couple. I turn image review off to prevent myself from wanting to look, and so as not to distract others around me in a dimly lit room as 5 second strobes of a just passed moment pop up.
Wilco is one of my favorite bands, and their singer Jeff Tweedy is as insightful a person as I've ever read. It's nearly impossible to attend a concert now without experiencing the sea of smartphones between you and the artist. At a concert in Memphis he took time to chastise someone in the front for experiencing the entire show through the small screen he held between himself and the artist, and it was caught by someone else further back doing the same. And I believe he's right.
If we choose to capture the memory in any way other than by fully experiencing it and living it back in our minds then we forfeit some of it. It may be a lot, it may be a little, but as the premise suggests it's not "fully" experienced. I understand that going in, and have learned to take precautions to minimize it. I've learned to decide beforehand whether or not I want to attend as a participant or as a documentarian, for that decision dictates just how I will view, and remember the event. I also believe that while I may not experience the event fully as a documentarian, there are aspects - moments - of it that I will experience
more fully than anyone else, and that is the trade-off.