Skip to main content

Home/ Multitasking/ Group items tagged flow

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Sarah Ngov

Why Multitasking Doesn't Work | Lateral Action - 0 views

  • Multitasking, when it comes to paying attention, is a myth. The brain naturally focuses on concepts sequentially, one at a time. At first that might sound confusing; at one level the brain does multitask. You can walk and talk at the same time. Your brain controls your heartbeat while you read a book. A pianist can play a piece with left hand and right hand simultaneously. Surely this is multitasking. But I am talking about the brain’s ability to pay attention… To put it bluntly, research shows that we can’t multitask. We are biologically incapable of processing attention-rich inputs simultaneously.
  • When most people refer to multitasking they mean simultaneously performing two or more things that require mental effort and attention. Examples would include saying we’re spending time with family while were researching stocks online, attempting to listen to a CD and answering email at the same time, or pretending to listen to an employee while we are crunching the numbers.
  • So there’s no such thing as multitasking. Just task switching – or at best, background tasking, in which one activity consumes our attention while we’re mindlessly performing another.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • When I trained in hypnosis, we were taught that one of the easiest ways to create amnesia is to interrupt someone. Have you ever had the experience of chatting to a friend in a cafe or restaurant, when the waiter interrupts to take your order – and when he’s gone, neither of you can remember what you were talking about?
  •  
    This article written by Mark McGuiness talks about why multitasking does NOT work. He says that there is no such thing as multitasking since when people multitask, essentially they are just switching rapidly from one task to another. He also encourages single-mindedness - focusing only at one task at a time. 
Sahana Sellathurai

Multitasking Muddles Brains, Even When the Computer Is Off | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

    • Sahana Sellathurai
       
      The experiment done to see how effective multitasking is.
  • In every test, students who spent less time simultaneously reading e-mail, surfing the web, talking on the phone and watching TV performed best.
  • college students who routinely juggle many flows of information, bouncing from e-mail to web text to video to chat to phone calls, fared significantly worse than their low-multitasking peers
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • children doing worse on homework while watching television, office workers being more productive when not checking email every five minutes.
1 - 2 of 2
Showing 20 items per page