Why Multitasking Harms Your Productivity
Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.
You are now subscribed
Your newsletter sign-up was successful
Want to add more newsletters?
Delivered Daily
Daily Newsletter
Sign up for the latest discoveries, groundbreaking research and fascinating breakthroughs that impact you and the wider world direct to your inbox.
Once a week
Life's Little Mysteries
Feed your curiosity with an exclusive mystery every week, solved with science and delivered direct to your inbox before it's seen anywhere else.
Once a week
How It Works
Sign up to our free science & technology newsletter for your weekly fix of fascinating articles, quick quizzes, amazing images, and more
Delivered daily
Space.com Newsletter
Breaking space news, the latest updates on rocket launches, skywatching events and more!
Once a month
Watch This Space
Sign up to our monthly entertainment newsletter to keep up with all our coverage of the latest sci-fi and space movies, tv shows, games and books.
Once a week
Night Sky This Week
Discover this week's must-see night sky events, moon phases, and stunning astrophotos. Sign up for our skywatching newsletter and explore the universe with us!
Join the club
Get full access to premium articles, exclusive features and a growing list of member rewards.
Multitasking may reduce your productivity, and now a new study shows that this may happen because multitasking interferes with certain types of brain activity. The results suggest that it is better to work on one task at a time than try to complete many tasks at once, the researchers said.
In the study, the researchers wanted to look at what happens in the brain when the process of gathering information and absorbing it is interrupted. The scientists scanned people's brains while they were watching short segments from "Star Wars," "Indiana Jones" and "James Bond" movies. [6 Foods That Are Good for Your Brain]
Normally, to understand a sequence of events happening over time — as happens when you watch a movie — the brain must gather information about the events as they unfold, and absorb this information. However, when a person starts paying attention to something else, which is unrelated to the sequence of events, the information-gathering and absorbing process is interrupted. This phenomenon has real-life consequences: For example, a person usually needs to make an effort to recall what happened in a TV show after a commercial break, the authors noted in the study, published April 5 in the journal Human Brain Mapping.
In one experiment, the researchers asked the people to watch 6.5-minute segments from three movies: the participants first watched 6.5 minutes from a "James Bond" movie, then 6.5 minutes from an "Indiana Jones" movie and 6.5 minutes from a "Star Wars" movie.
In another experiment, the researchers again showed 6.5-minute segments from the same movies; however, these were cut up into 50-second-long pieces. In addition, this time around, the participants watched the short segments in a varying order. For example, the participants first watched 50 seconds of a "Bond" movie, then 50 seconds of an "Indiana Jones" movie, then 50 seconds from a "Star Wars" movie. But then, they watched 50 more seconds from "Indiana Jones," then 50 more seconds from "Star Wars," and then another 50 seconds from "James Bond," and so on, until they watched a total of 6.5 minutes from each movie. [Daydreaming Again? 5 Facts About the Wandering Mind]
The brain scans, done with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), showed that the brain areas that are responsible for combining pieces of information into sequences that make sense worked more efficiently when the people watched the movies in consecutive, 6.5-minute segments, rather than in the segments that were shorter and shown in varying order.
The findings suggest that it is better to complete one task at a time than work on many different tasks at once, study co-author Iiro Jääskeläinen, an associate professor at Aalto University in Greater Helsinki, Finland, said in a statement.
Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.
"It’s easy to fall into the trap of multitasking," he said. "In that case, it seems like there is little real progress and this leads to a feeling of inadequacy." Multitasking may also affect one's ability to concentrate, leading to stress, he said. "Prolonged stress hinders thinking and memory," he added.
Originally published on Live Science.
