Study finds people who multitask often bad at it

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Study finds people who multitask often bad at it


Aug 24, 9:38 PM (ET)

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

WASHINGTON (AP) - The people who multitask the most are the ones who are worst at it. That's the surprising conclusion of researchers at Stanford University, who found multitaskers are more easily distracted and less able to ignore irrelevant information than people who do less multitasking.

"The huge finding is, the more media people use the worse they are at using any media. We were totally shocked," Clifford Nass, a professor at Stanford's communications department, said in a telephone interview.

The researchers studied 262 college undergraduates, dividing them into high and low multitasking groups and comparing such things as memory, ability to switch from one task to another and being able to focus on a task. Their findings are reported in Tuesday's edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

When it came to such essential abilities, people who did a lot of multitasking didn't score as well as others, Nass said.

Still to be answered is why the folks who are worst at multitasking are the ones doing it the most.

It's sort of a chicken-or-egg question.

"Is multitasking causing them to be lousy at multitasking, or is their lousiness at multitasking causing them to be multitaskers?" Nass wondered. "Is it born or learned?"

In a society that seems to encourage more and more multitasking, the findings have social implications, Nass observed. Multitasking is already blamed for car crashes as several states restrict the use of cell phones while driving. Lawyers or advertisers can try to use irrelevant information to distract and refocus people to influence their decisions.

In the study, the researchers first had to figure out who are the heavy and light multitaskers. They gave the students a form listing a variety of media such as print, television, computer-based video, music, computer games, telephone voice or text, and so forth.

The students were asked, for each form of media, which other forms they used at the same time always, often, sometimes or never.

The result ranged from an average of about 1.5 media items at the low end to more than four among heavy multitaskers.

Then they tested the abilities of students in the various groups.

For example, ability to ignore irrelevant information was tested by showing them a group of red and blue rectangles, blanking them out, and then showing them again and asking if any of the red ones had moved.

The test required ignoring the blue rectangles. The researchers thought people who do a lot of multitasking would be better at it.

"But they're not. They're worse. They're much worse," said Nass. The high media multitaskers couldn't ignore the blue rectangles. "They couldn't ignore stuff that doesn't matter. They love stuff that doesn't matter," he said.

Perhaps the multitaskers can take in the information and organize it better? Nope.

"They are worse at that, too," Nass said.

"So then we thought, OK, maybe they have bigger memories. They don't. They were equal" with the low multitaskers, he added.

Finally, they tested ability to switch from one task to another by classifying a letter as a vowel or consonant, or a number as even or odd. The high multitaskers took longer to make the switch from one task to the other.

This particularly surprised the researchers, considering the need to switch from one thing to another in multitasking.

"They couldn't help thinking about the task they weren't doing," lead author Eyal Ophir said. "The high multitaskers are always drawing from all the information in front of them. They can't keep things separate in their minds."

The next step is to look into what multitaskers are good at and see if the difference between high and low multitaskers is one of "exploring" versus "exploiting" information.

"High multitaskers just love more and more information. Their greatest thrill is to get more," he said. On the other hand, "exploiters like to think about the information they already have."

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20090825/D9A9K17O1.html
 
If you watch her real close I bet she stops washing the dishes and looks your child in the face and talks to them when they approach.

Its not really multitasking, its learning to switch from one task to the next and back again on a seconds notice. All good parents learn to do it.

Multitasking is trying to so two things at once.
 
If you watch her real close I bet she stops washing the dishes and looks your child in the face and talks to them when they approach.

Its not really multitasking, its learning to switch from one task to the next and back again on a seconds notice. All good parents learn to do it.

Multitasking is trying to so two things at once.

Multitasking is switching between tasks rapidly. You solved the mystery that didn't exist.
 
Multitasking is trying to so two things at once.
Yup, that's what I thought it was. But with her it's more like 14 to 38 things at once. I've watched her fold clothes, watch NASCAR, talk on the phone, yell at me and write a grocery list all at the same time.
 
If people pulled over while texting then they would be doing one thing and once.

Instead they try to drive and text at the same time.

That is doing two things at once (and badly as expected)
 
If people pulled over while texting then they would be doing one thing and once.

Instead they try to drive and text at the same time.

That is doing two things at once (and badly as expected)

but it's not actually two things at once. two things at once is not possible, which is why it works out badly.
 
Yup, that's what I thought it was. But with her it's more like 14 to 38 things at once. I've watched her fold clothes, watch NASCAR, talk on the phone, yell at me and write a grocery list all at the same time.

She folding on automatic (mucle memory).

Shes not really paying attenhtion to the Nascar (hope I didnt ruin the romance there)

Shes not listening to her girlfriend on the phone she is actually thinking about the grocery list.

The yelling at you is just the fun part for her because she is tired of paying so much money for the beer she just wrote on the list for you.
 
but it's not actually two things at once. two things at once is not possible, which is why it works out badly.

if you are holding the wheel and the car is moving then you are driving its not the cars fault that you are so stupid you think you can then also read and type at the same time.

It is still doing two things at once....well maybe three because you are also being a huge asshole.
 
if you are holding the wheel and the car is moving then you are driving its not the cars fault that you are so stupid you think you can then also read and type at the same time.

It is still doing two things at once....well maybe three because you are also being a huge asshole.

You're only driving if you're paying attention. If you're texting, your'e just a passenger.
 
HUH?
In any case that is all you ever do excrement flinger.

I just post an article about Multitaskers and somehow I am getting crap flung back at me for it?
It was a taste of your own medicine. It seems that at least half of your responses have the word "Bush" in it.
 
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