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Brand Financial Training > Studying and Revision > Multitasking – The new brain disease?
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Multitasking – The new brain disease?
November 11, 2014
Multitasking – The new brain disease?

Multitasking – The new brain disease?

Posted by The Team at Brand Financial Training on November 11, 2014 in Studying and Revision
Last updated on January 20th, 2020 at 9:13 am

This article gives us an insight on just how multitasking not only doesn’t work, but can adversely affect your intelligence and emotional control. Read on to learn 7 things you can do to improve your focus on exam revision.

Written by Lysette Offley

Are you sure you want to multitask?

While it may sound like a good idea to get several things done at once, it’s actually known to slow you down, not speed things up.

What’s more, the quality of what you achieve deteriorates too. If you have any trouble concentrating, attending to detail or organising yourself, multitasking is going to make it worse.

Thought you were good at multitasking? Not possible apparently.

Researchers at Stanford University, in the States, found that when you are incessantly bombarded with information on those interminable and multiple electronic devices, you become more forgetful too.

MultitaskingWhat appears like doing several things at once, is in reality, fast switching of attention from one thing to the next, to the next and back again. And according to research at Sussex University, all that extra time we’re spending these days texting and tweeting and emailing while watching TV, leads to changes in the brain.

The more you fiddle with several things at once, the less dense the anterior cingulate cortex in your brain becomes. This is the part that allows you to relate and empathise with other people. It’s also responsible for cognitive and emotional control. We’re talking emotional intelligence.

And the implication is, the more you attempt to multitask, the less emotionally intelligent you’ll become. The way you think, and the equipment you need to think with will change too. So not only are you less efficient and get sloppier results while engaged in the multitasking, you’re setting your brain up to be less capable in the future too.

I kid you not!

Research coming out of London University now shows that multitasking lowers your IQ!

OK, so maybe you’d expect to be more fuzzy-minded if you’d stayed up all night, or had been on the funny stuff! But apparently, multitasking typically lowers your IQ by 15 points, bringing an average person’s IQ down to the level of a typical eight-year-old!

Still think multitasking’s a good idea?

There also seems to be some sort of correlation between the brain changes associated with multitasking, and brain damage! More research may uncover whether brain damage predisposes people to multitask or whether multitasking leads to brain damage.

Something to think about!

Top 7 things to keep you focused on your revision:

  1.   Find a place to revise that’s quiet and comfortable (turn off stereos, radios etc)
  2.   Tell everyone else to stay away!
  3.   Remove or cover anything that’ll interrupt or distract you (telephone, iPad, newspaper, throw a blanket over the TV screen!)
  4.   Get into the ideal learning state (deep, calming breaths, light a perfumed candle – whatever you usually do that works)
  5.   Tackle the harder stuff first. It’ll make you feel good and will motivate you to keep going
  6.   Don’t start off having overeaten or loaded with sugar. Eat brain food
  7.   Direct your attention: tell yourself how long you’re going to focus for and what you’re going to learn.

http://www.genius-material.com/

Tags:multitasking can affect your IQ, multitasking doesn't work, reasons to avoid trying to do too many things at once

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