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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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It's so interesting that you...Submitted by Jason Burns (not verified) on March 26, 2007 - 8:53am.
It's so interesting that you would make this post. I was brainstorming a blog post this morning while driving to work. The main point was that in today's world, given our time scaled methodologies, our projects are really suffering in the discovery phase for two reasons: 1) the time cycle for discovery has been abbreviated to the point that it's often the first, not the best solution that gets green lighted for development and 1) The development and discovery phases are both being executed in conjunction with many other projects, phone calls, emailing, web surfing, etc. and this causes everyone in the project to direct less focus to the solution's viability and leave us just to find functionality. We end up with working solutions, but more often than not they aren't the "best" solutions. » POSTED IN:
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