- Psychologists have been warning us about Multitasking for decades. Some say it’s harmful to productivity and others say you can’t do it at all.
- Distracted driving has nothing to do with whether you’re using your hands or not
- Multitasking may have benefits.
- One study showed that talking on the phone during long, monotonous drives might help keep drivers alert and awake.
- Other studies show that students sitting in a “boring” lecture may be better off doodling, because the combination of activities keeps their minds occupied.
- Many people might call multitasking.
- Psychologists call rapid task-switching.
- Your attention and consciousness only can focus on a little bit at a time, so it’s one task or the other.
- There’s the cost that comes with task-switching.
- A delay when you switch from one thing to another.
- A temporary drop in performance.
- Switching tasks every few minutes, or every few seconds, the cognitive cost of switching from one task to the other interferes with performance.
- You can think of it like losing money.
- Identifying the gender of a face, and then switching to identifying the facial expression, the switch only takes only about 200 milliseconds.
- But even this small cost can reduce productivity by 40 per cent if you try to study while watching a movi
- Interruptions cost the United States an estimated US$650 billion a year.
- It takes 25 minutes, on average, to get back to task. Some people in the study never did.
- It might even take you 68 seconds to remember what you were doing after a distracting phone call.
- Interruptions and doing many things at once generally make us less productive.
- When doing something that requires thinking, don’t do anything else.
- To remain focused but at the same time cover a lot of ground, try structuring your day into half-hour chunks. Work on something different just about every half hour.
- Multitasking isn’t all bad. If one of the tasks is really easy, or something you can do unconsciously, there is little downside.
- Listening to music while you exercise makes you exercise more.
- Doodling during a boring lecture
- Listening to instrumental music while you program computers or study helps you focus.
- Even task switching isn’t all bad. It refreshes your mind.
- Many people deliberately switch tasks to “incubate” a problem they are stuck on.