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David Rock

Your Brain at Work

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  • Жанна Карамергеноваciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    Distractions are everywhere. And with the always-on technologies of today, they take a heavy toll on productivity. One study found that office distractions eat up an average 2.1 hours a day. Another study, published in October 2005, found that employees spend an average of 11 minutes on a project before being distracted. After an interruption, it takes them 25 minutes to return to the original task, if they do at all. People switch activities every 3 minutes, either making a call, speaking with someone in their cubicle, or working on a document.
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    It activates when you think about yourself and other people.
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    The medial prefrontal cortex i
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    One reason for your wandering attention is that the nervous system is constantly processing, reconfiguring, and reconnecting the trillions of connections in your brain each moment.
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    Once you understand how much energy is involved in high-level thinking such as planning and creating,
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    If you have to multitask, combine active thinking tasks only with automatic, embedded routines.
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    Multitasking can be done easily if you are executing embedded routines.
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    If you do multiple conscious tasks at once you will experience a big drop-off in accuracy or performance.
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    Taking time to work out the right order to make decisions can save a lot of effort and energy overall, reducing unresolved issues in your queue. Reducing queues stops you from putting the same things on and off the stage over and over again, which gives you more energy, more space for other information, and overall more resources for focusing on other tasks.
  • Martin Østervang Andersenciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    Decisions that get caught in queues, which you try to answer but fail to, are one of the great wasters of your brain’s resources.
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