Why Smart People Don't Multitask
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Why Smart People Don't Multitask

You may have heard that multitasking is bad for you, but new studies show that it kills your performance and may even damage your brain. Every time you multitask you aren't just harming your performance in the moment; you may very well be damaging an area of your brain that's critical to your future success at work.

Research conducted at Stanford University found that multitasking is less productive than doing a single thing at a time. The researchers found that people who are regularly bombarded with several streams of electronic information cannot pay attention, recall information, or switch from one job to another as well as those who complete one task at a time.

A Special Skill?

But what if some people have a special gift for multitasking? The Stanford researchers compared groups of people based on their tendency to multitask and their belief that it helps their performance. They found that heavy multitaskers—those who multitask a lot and feel that it boosts their performance—were actually worse at multitasking than those who like to do a single thing at a time. The frequent multitaskers performed worse because they had more trouble organizing their thoughts and filtering out irrelevant information, and they were slower at switching from one task to another.

Ouch.

Multitasking reduces your efficiency and performance because your brain can only focus on one thing at a time. When you try to do two things at once, your brain lacks the capacity to perform both tasks successfully.

Multitasking Lowers IQ

Research also shows that, in addition to slowing you down, multitasking lowers your IQ. A study at the University of London found that participants who multitasked during cognitive tasks experienced IQ score declines that were similar to what they'd expect if they had smoked marijuana or stayed up all night. IQ drops of 15 points for multitasking men lowered their scores to the average range of an 8-year-old child.

So the next time you're writing your boss an email during a meeting, remember that your cognitive capacity is being diminished to the point that you might as well let an 8-year-old write it for you.

Brain Damage From Multitasking?

It was long believed that cognitive impairment from multitasking was temporary, but new research suggests otherwise. Researchers at the University of Sussex in the UK compared the amount of time people spend on multiple devices (such as texting while watching TV) to MRI scans of their brains. They found that high multitaskers had less brain density in the anterior cingulate cortex, a region responsible for empathy as well as cognitive and emotional control.

While more research is needed to determine if multitasking is physically damaging the brain (versus existing brain damage that predisposes people to multitask), it's clear that multitasking has negative effects.

Neuroscientist Kep Kee Loh, the study’s lead author, explained the implications:

"I feel that it is important to create an awareness that the way we are interacting with the devices might be changing the way we think and these changes might be occurring at the level of brain structure.”

The EQ Connection

Nothing turns people off quite like fiddling with your phone or tablet during a conversation. Multitasking in meetings and other social settings indicates low Self- and Social Awareness, two emotional intelligence (EQ) skills that are critical to success at work. TalentSmart has tested more than a million people and found that 90% of top performers have high EQs. If multitasking does indeed damage the anterior cingulate cortex (a key brain region for EQ) as current research suggests, doing so will lower your EQ while it alienates your coworkers.

Bringing It All Together

If you’re prone to multitasking, this is not a habit you’ll want to indulge—it clearly slows you down and decreases the quality of your work. Even if it doesn’t cause brain damage, allowing yourself to multitask will fuel any existing difficulties you have with concentration, organization, and attention to detail.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Dr. Travis Bradberry is the award-winning co-author of the #1 bestselling book, Emotional Intelligence 2.0, and the cofounder of TalentSmart, the world's leading provider of emotional intelligence tests and training, serving more than 75% of Fortune 500 companies. His bestselling books have been translated into 25 languages and are available in more than 150 countries. Dr. Bradberry has written for, or been covered by, Newsweek, TIME, BusinessWeek, Fortune, Forbes, Fast Company, Inc., USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The Harvard Business Review.

If you'd like to learn how to increase your emotional intelligence (EQ), consider taking the online Emotional Intelligence Appraisal? test that's included with the Emotional Intelligence 2.0 book. Your test results will pinpoint which of the book's 66 emotional intelligence strategies will increase your EQ the most.

Margaret Bright

Managing Director at Fountains of Life Educational Services

4 年

Please Fola contact me urgently

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Sanal Sankar

Director of Technology, CellarStone | Director at Founder Institute, Chennai

5 年

Whether multi-tasking is bad or not cannot be a black and white inference, especially since it is about brain's capabilities. Science has still a long way to go to get a deep understanding of brain. Multi-tasking has always been there, just like we talk while we drive/walk. It's a mix of "complexity of the task", "focus that the task demands", "How skilled you are on that task" and several similar factors that decides whether we can multi-task or not, at a particular moment.

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Ajay Kumar

Director at MVM Infotech, Bangkok | e-Business Consultant | Web, App, eCommerce & Travel Tech Expert | SEO & Digital Marketing | 200+ Clients Served

5 年

Nice Post,?Looking forward to seeing what you have to show next. Well done!

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Karl Walter Keirstead

Narrowing the gap between strategy and operations.

5 年

Just wondering how many people in b2b actually get to "focus on one thing at a time"? In law enforcement, you have investigators going to crime scenes then back at the station house writing up case notes relating to the incident, they get input that advances other active cases making up their case load and, on top of all of this, there is the occasional eureka that advances one or more of their cold cases. In ERs, doctors/nurses move from one patient to the next but often are asked for advice/assistance re other patients. Workflow/workload management systems that we design and roll out for client use finds the typical user at a user InTray where tasks pop up and accumulate. The users get some relief from being able to micro-schedule their backlog of tasks.? Otherwise, they are carving up their time across 10-20 pending/in-progress tasks. Blog writing is an example of? a chore for me.? I get an idea, spend a hour getting a topic going and it often takes 2-3 days to expand the topic, write up\re-write content, get the title right, find a suitable image. Meanwhile, I have clients, meetings, Skype / GoToMeeting sessions, the dog wants to go out, etc. etc.?

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