Humans Monotask; Computers Task-switch; Nothing Multitasks - DBR 061
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I was having a sales conversation, discussing several ideas around managing tasks and attention. I happened to mention the background of the term multitasking and his eyes got really big and he started asking questions. I realized that he was not familiar with the story of how we arrived at the term “multitasking” and so I told it to him. He was fascinated and realized that there is really very little evidence that humans can multitask – it’s like we all believe some fable. This encouraged him to realize that he needed to abandon his pretext of trying to multitask and to take his attention management more seriously We don’t want to acknowledge our “weakness”, so we don’t use the tool that helps us. Fair enough, human nature and all – who wants to walk with a cane? History of the idea of multitasking shows that the term is only about 70 years old – prior to that, nobody had any concept that we could (or would want to) do it. The first known published use of the term is in 1965. For data, I consulted Google N-gram viewer
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- The rise in use of “multitasking”
- The most interesting thing is that computers still can’t really do it.
- The original computer was a single-task mechanical device
- From that, we built a machine that could have its purpose controlled on the fly.
- That’s what a Turing machine is – that’s the concept.
- so we've conceptualized this notion that the machine can do multiple things, do different things,
- The term multitasking came into use in the 60s, and it was engineers talking to engineers
- It was never a term that was really intended to apply to human people
- Brain as computer and computer as brain
- If a computer can do it, then maybe a human brain can do it, and if a human brain can do it, and maybe a computer could do it.
- We’re not multitasking, we're task switching and applying continuous partial attention.
- Almost before we recognize it, we have switched task
- We lose our focus
- I'd better do that now. I'd better stop what I'm doing and go do that thing
- We're slow task switchers - neurobiology
- Things that make us feel the need to stop doing what we're doing and start doing another thing.
- A majority of people don’t know that this is a problem - that we can't multitask
- Our machines are much more responsive, consistent, and well-trained than we are We need to find and solve systemic problems in our processes
- We can only do those things through calm thoughtful work
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