Multitasking Will Make Your Brain Explode

Tue Mar 27, 2007 4:10PM EDT

See Comments (599)

I live for multitasking. I would get nothing done without it. I watch TV while I'm writing, read a story in another window, keep a magazine propped to one side, and answer emails/the phone/the doorbell on the side. And according to a new study this is all going to lead to my ruin.

The New York Times reports on a new study that basically says multitasking actually makes you less efficient than if you concentrated on one thing at a time. I'm not entirely sure that's what it says, though. I was talking on the phone while reading the article. (Kidding!)

To some extent, this is common sense. It's long been known that talking on a cell phone while driving a car is exceedingly dangerous. Some studies say it's just as bad as driving drunk.

But the science of the phenomenon is intriguing. I feel more productive when doing multiple things at once, but maybe I'm not. The key, says the researcher, is that you lose time and focus when you switch between tasks. Try it for yourself. Type half of a sentence. Go check your email. Then come back and try to finish your thought. It's tough to get back in the groove of what you were doing.

The expert advice? Check email once an hour. And turn off outside distractions except, maybe, for soft background music. 

As for me, I'm going to experiment with checking my email less frequently and see how that works for my concentration. An hour? No, but I am changing my "check for new messages" setting in Outlook from checking once every two minutes to every five.

So, multitaskers: Still think working on more than one thing at a time makes you more productive? Sound off! 

LINK: Slow Down, Brave Multitasker, and Don't Read This in Traffic 

Comments on Multitasking Will Make Your Brain Explode

Post a Comment

Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.

  • 46 Posted by jeff.spencer@rogers.com on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    That old saying 'jack of all trades, master of none' comes to mind when I think of multitasking. It is not possible to do anything well unless your have 100% of your attention on it. Try reading a good novel with your dog barking. Remember, anything worth doing is worth doing well and you cannot do that by multitasking. You may be busy but not productive..so work smart not hard. That should be enough cliches to sum up why multitasking is not productive.

  • 47 Posted by archanashah77 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    Being an Admin professional, calls for constant multitasking. Yes, at times, it is both exhausting and irritating, but the feeling vanishes with a wink. I am a responsible person, both at office and at home as well. I am looked upon for several little as well as major tasks and responsibilities. And I enjoy doing all my jobs irrespective of the importance. The exhaustion itself give me the revival energy to keep it going. I am a perfectionist and love the challenges and multitasking.

  • 48 Posted by rnldangel on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    I know a person who does multitasking, this person is not happy just doing one thing. But on the other hand a person on the outside can look at it and see that some of the things get left out of the loop because you lose track of what you were doing at one time or another. That my friend can come back and bite you if it takes you to long to remember what it was. Believe me I have been there and done it. You can several things going but it is much easier in the long run if you complete one task at a time - today you have to look at it in a financial sort of way. if you get my drift.

  • 49 Posted by soccerisfifacool on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    I totally agree with MOST of this stuff. The one thing i have a total problem with is the soft music in the background. Music helps me concentrate more, because i can block out any of the annoying distraction i might have.

  • 50 Posted by iain399 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:22PM EDT Report Abuse

    Multi tasking SEEMS clever to the whizz kids because they have a large capacity in their brains for holding rules and swapping them out. But multi tasking after a few years is actually painful, because you've now burned out the circuits, which aren't gonna come back. Imagine driving everywhere in first gear! The sound makes you feel you're really achieving something, but of course, you're just ruining the engine and getting noplace fast. And you've done work which was not nearly as good as what you could have achieved, without the channel-hopping mentality which makes multi tasking seem so cool. But pah! It's only the brain burning out.. so what? It's a bit like smoking was, 40 years ago. It looks cool.. where's the harm? So everyone was puffing away smugly until it was shown the damage they were doing.

  • 51 Posted by paulandrew_ceo on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    I cannot begin to recall how many women I have encountered driving and talking on a cell phone at the same time. They are always oblivious to the world around them. Generally slowly moving forward in the outside lane of an interstate or attempting to parallel park or some other more challenging automobile maneuver that is difficult enough for them, let alone talk on a phone as well. Then there qare those who think they can drive and apply make-up simultaneously!!! How can people believe they are capable of multi-tasking? I fully support one task at a time and complete it efficiently and quickly!

  • 52 Posted by nickleplatednuts on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    multitasking is just a BOSS'S way of wanting to to do even more then you already do,i say if you want me to multitask then "SHOW ME THE MONEY"?

  • 53 Posted by lucienriviere on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:59PM EDT Report Abuse

    I fall into the same trap constantly ; I typically interrupt the reading of an e-mail as it just pops up, then when I try to go back to whatever I was doing before the interruption, to find myself mentally "paralyzed". This may be the reason for the grocery list ; whether you need very few items, as litthe as four (Butter, bread, toilet paper, light bulbs), in your belief it isn't really necessary to write such a short list...well, wait till you get back home and you're asked "where is the butter?"... Lucien Riviere

  • 54 Posted by bskolash1@verizon.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    Being retired from middle management, I am pleased to see some common sense coming back. multitasking is a "buzz word" that sounds cool, hip, todays world, etc. A person who is organized and makes thier moves count will outwork a disorganized multitasker easily. Today, it seems modern management is always looking for a "panacea", be it multitasking, six sigma, lean manuf, etc. I say WAKE UP!, good business is the right mix of common sense, effort and dedication, something American management seems to overlook in thier efforts to short range profit take and advance themselves. Bill K

  • 55 Posted by pottergal89 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ok so tell me how many people multitasked while reading this...........I know i did!!! It is multitasking if you play with your hair while reading something or working on a problem so is that going to take from the qaulity of the work...... If you are trying to do your homework and watch tv it helps you concentate more on your work because you are trying to tune out the tv

  • 56 Posted by joannjem01@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    As a stay at home,I guess you could say that I too am a multitasker.,I am always and not sure if its by nature but doing more than one thing at a time, I also work from home, and while getting my work started at my desk, I am at the same time leaving it for mins.at a time to get breakfast for my son.,and pulling myself together at the same time,. I do my lesson plans, answer the phone, and yet still have time to go to the kitchen or check on my son, or yes check on email messages,. reviewing my online tasks seems to have been neglected to some extent because there just isnt a time when i can sit here for hours at a time, being inside and working solely on one project.. So not done intentionally but think its done with my priorities not in the correct order, sometimes i do wish i had less focus on multitasking but seems to be something I am just mentally challenged to do..

  • 57 Posted by topgun3131 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    I guess it depends on the person & the task(s) at hand. I love to Multi-task...it makes the day go by fast. Yes mistasks can happen but, it doesn't matter.. if you are careful with one task verses two tasks. If receptionists only done one thing at a time then nothing would get done in that office all day. It all boils down to the person & the function that is being performed.

  • 58 Posted by rrmjvand on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    Indeed, multitasking is grossly overrated! I have ADD and my mind is always on "automatic multitask"; I must take one thing at a time to accomplish a task effectively. It's a nightmare to stay focused on anything when I am expected to multitask! I have been made to feel inadequate by arrogant, impatient business world bosses and coworkers whose minds don't work like mine. When I finish a project, though, it's more successful than anyone else given the same task. Stop putting such an emphasis on Multitasking! It's bunk.

  • 59 Posted by trbahr01 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:19PM EDT Report Abuse

    I absolutely agree that we are less efficient, I work at a fast paced job with strong multi-tasking functions, coming back later a month or so looking at my work or others, many mistakes or better methods could have been used. I remember my first boss said to me finish what you start before going on to the next and you will never have to correct it. My experience is that most employees make a number of mistakes that are just taken as the way it is.

  • 60 Posted by mwstangland on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    Cell-phone drivers are defintely a bigger menace than drinking drivers at the present time. Wurly

  • 61 Posted by nickleplatednuts on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    ever hear those stories of people who have to go back into surgery to have a forgotten scalpel removed from there stomach? their surgeon was MULTITASKING!

  • 62 Posted by krxofan on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    If you asked me, "Multitasking" is a word that should be banned from the English language altogether.

  • 63 Posted by al.hart on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    Desire to have things done quickly prevents their being done thoroughly. --- Confucius

  • 64 Posted by acartwright@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree with some of all the comments before this one. Multitasking is a way of my life, if I'm not doing at least 3 things at once I will get bored and feel I'm not doing anything. At home relaxed with this new DVR and picture in picture I will always watch 2 programs at once while 1 eye is on the PIP and load the dish washer when those all go to commercial. At work I will work on many things at once while answering the phone and my cell. Sometimes I may have 3-10 things going at once. It is all about the individual and how they can handel stress, I feel very little. I love doing as many things at once as possible, it's fun. No one knows who I am so I can say this, I have allot of common sense and a high IQ this helps.

  • 65 Posted by mhousto@verizon.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    If I didn't multi-task at work, I'd get nothing done..my job requires that I switch gears at a moment's notice...And in this day of employers expecting more work from their employees in an 8 hr day (often with inadequate compensation as in my case) multi-tasking is the only way to get things done. You just have to be good at it!

More Posts: First Prev 2 3 4 5 6 Next Last

Post a Comment


My Tech

Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.

Also on Yahoo! Tech

Computers Home Office Wi-Fi & Networking Phones & PDAs Cameras & Camcorders TV & Home Theater Portable Audio
 

Question and Answer content at Yahoo! Tech is written by Yahoo! users at Yahoo! Answers. Yahoo! does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any Yahoo! Answers content. For more information, read the Full Disclaimer.

Opinions expressed by the Advisors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Yahoo! Inc. Yahoo! receives no compensation from any manufacturer or distributor nor does it compensate any Advisor for the coverage of any product or service in any Advisor's content.