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NYT: New data on the problems of "multitasking"
Merlin Mann | Mar 26 2007
Slow Down, Multitaskers, and Don’t Read in Traffic - New York Times Yesterday's New York Times front page ran an article pulling together the results of several recent studies looking at how interruptions and attempts to multitask can affect the quality of work as well as the length of recovery time. Here's one bit that really grabbed me:
And, from a PDF of another of the studies cited ("Isolation of a Central Bottleneck of Information Processing with Time-Resolved fMRI"), here's a telling snippet from the article's abstract (yes, most of the rest of it is well over my head):
My own feelings on the myth of multi-tasking are well-documented, but it's fascinating to see research interest focused in this area -- although it's certainly not surprising, given its potential impact on knowledge workers and the industries that employ them. Again, from yesterday's NYT article:
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Drat. Now it is...Submitted by Jim S (not verified) on March 26, 2007 - 4:29am.
Drat. Now it is going to take me 15 minutes to get back in the flow of writing that paper I was working on before NetNewsWire "suggested" that I read this. Well, since it's going to take 15 minutes anyway, I might as well catch up on the rest of my blog subscriptions. By the way, that 15 (or 20) minute delay to regain concentration has been well understood for a long time. I'm not sure why Microsoft had to conduct a study to figure it out. Ten years ago a previous employer experimented with disabling email every day for two hours in the morning and two hours in the afternoon for that reason. We also had these funny little red light / green light things on our desks. A red light meant "I'm concentrating and can't afford a twenty minute re-concentration delay right now so please don't bother me." Unfortunately, they were generally ignored because no one EVER turned theirs to green. » POSTED IN:
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