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.

  • 587 Posted by sbobbie@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    What a strange world we live in..we are surely missing a lot in life with this kind of goofy mentality that we can't stay focused on one item at a time & in doing a good job, this is why a lot of what we are doing is not right.. so many mistakes and it takes a person who is focused to finish everyone elses work. I for one am tired of it. I don't think these multi-taskers realize how deficient they are. Maybe they should take stock and then they would do a better job..

  • 588 Posted by mercedesdealer007 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    Like a previous post mentioned (larmo33), I truly believe it depends on what you are doing. I can talk on the phone, handle walk-in customers, and anything else boring you could think of all at the same time. However, the more intriguing tasks are to me, like writing a long memo, I must focus on just that in order to be productive and timely. Thus depending on the person productivity varies.

  • 589 Posted by lale7861@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:56PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have also at one time thought that multi-tasking was more efficient, but then I did take the time to complete one task at a time and it really was easier. You don't have to switch your thinking back and forth as much.I found that it was distracting even when you where doing something on the computer and the phone would ring. When you were thinking about what you were saying you couldn't really think about what you were typing. When doing one thing at a time, you get each task done fastier also. And in the long run you are more efficient because you can do more tasks in less time.

  • 590 Posted by cactusheart@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    kassyopeia wrote: "I have driven to the doctors office while trying to keep a sick two year old from crying thus making the child yet again hurl all over the car and child" IMO, "multi-tasking" mothers in situations like these are a hazard to everyone while on the road. KEEP A SAFE DISTANCE from these types on the street/highway... Anyone who's seen the Wayans Bros. film "Little Man" and remembers the "carpooling soccer mom" scene will know EXACTLY what I mean *LOL* Although that depiction in the film was a slight exaggeration, over the years I myself have encountered one or two close calls by these "supermoms" while on the road. The point remains: Just because you're accomplishing multiple tasks at once doesn't mean you're accomplishing them well, or any better than you would have one at a time. Smiletech1969 raises a really excellent point: Do surgeons/dentists multi-task? And would you trust them any more or less if they did so on you? I also agree w/calsup's idea of a mother's definition of "multi-tasking". Right on!! Having the radio or news on while reading the mail while waiting for the water to boil on the stove and the dishwasher cycle to finish does indeed add up to alot of activity, but they're all passive activities that don't require much (if any) brainpower and don't really count as "multi-tasking" to me....But they can overstimulate, and add up to a fried-up brain in the end, just ask my mother *lol*

  • 591 Posted by burgmama on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    I hope that employers are seeing this, I believe multi-tasking is a term employers used to get more out of you during the work day and now I see it backfiring everywhere

  • 592 Posted by texasfirechick@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have to tell ya. I couldn't work where I work without multi-tasking. I work at a very busy corparate jet company and sometimes have to run up to 10 flights at a time! I think being able to multi-task keeps the ol brain kicked into high gear and keeps us from getting old before our time. It does have it's benefits. Keeps us sharp!

  • 593 Posted by texasfirechick@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    Oh and another thing while I am at it......my old boss would drive, eat and click away on her crackberry and has wrecked her car three times because of it. Well, that and half of what she typed was spelled incorrectly. SOOOOOO, with that I will say that some are good at it and some really aren't. Those of you who aren't so good at it, please please please don't try to text and crackberry in traffic. It's scary and extremely dangerous......we all have to know our limits......A good friend of mine is the perfect example. She can't talk on the phone and drive, not a multi-tasker, and she knows it so she doesn't do it.....see where I am going with this? Not trying to offend anyone. Hope I didn't...sorry if I did......I am also in the medical field so not just blurting out info......some folks brains just dont work like others.....we are all very different in this area....

  • 594 Posted by texasfirechick@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    To carina2665......I am a woman and I agree with you completely. It is by nature that we do these things well. Women kinda just have to, especially if you are a mommy.....my poor sister has the house to tend to and 3 insanely energetic children to keep up with so yes we do multi-task better. I think it's encoded in our genes...and in some men too that are single parents.....but I think thiers is more of a learned thing.....we just have it from birth....lol

  • 595 Posted by act_ng on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    multitasking rules. the conclusion of that study dependson the definition of multitasking, mre specifically, the timing of multutasking. are we talking about multitasking over an extended period of time or are we talking about multitasking in a split second. doing multiple things over several hours is still considered multitasking in the true technical defintion of the term. that is clearly more efficient than doing one thing, finishing before starting another. for example, right now while i'm responding to this comment, i'm upgrading tuning the firmware on my router, backing up my laptop as well as checking fourms for new posts. but i'm not about to interrupt this post.

  • 596 Posted by ahstafford@verizon.net on Thu Mar 29, 2007 10:01AM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm a minister in a medium-sized church and my day is full of interruptions, but my temperament allows for the shift of focus most of the time. Sometimes, for instance when I'm studying for a lesson, an interruption really throws me off kilter. For other tasks, I am actually a little refreshed by a phone call, e-mail, or visit from someone. I can often return to my task (say, writing) and read it from a starting point I had already written, and re-edit as my own outside source. It sometimes helps me catch errors that I would have missed if I had been focusing everything on that one task. I'm not a big multi-tasker, but shifting my focus back and forth sometimes helps. Sometimes not.

  • 597 Posted by ysghosn@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:58PM EDT Report Abuse

    Multi-tasking is the only way full time moms can get anything done; holding babies while sweeping, washing dishes while cooking, gardening while watching the kids play, bathing multiple children while cleaning the bathroom, helping with homework while checking the mail, nursing while trying to sleep in the middle of the night, need I go on? The list is endless! The only multi-task we don't have time for is watching TV while eating bon-bons! Sue Noel

  • 599 Posted by zettt on Thu Sep 3, 2009 11:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is a classic male-female-thing (I wouldn't go so far as to call it a 'problem', like the first poster did). Men can focus on one task, very intensively, and they can shut out the outside world. Women can multitask, but they get bored when they follow one project for a half-hour on end, and get easily distracted by talk in the background or other interruptions. There are, naturally, exceptions.

More Posts: First Prev 29 30 31 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.