Hidden Brain - Radio Replay: Life, Interrupted
Episode Date: December 2, 2017What price do we pay for the constant interruptions we get from our phones and computers? And is there a better way to handle distraction? In this week's Radio Replay we bring you a favorite conversat...ion with the computer scientist Cal Newport. Plus, Shankar gets electrodes strapped to his head to test a high-tech solution to interruptions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
For many people, this is what works sounds like nowadays.
It's a constant thrum of notifications, tweets and messages.
Every time we respond to an email or a text or Google a question that's just popped into
our head, we pay a small price.
In the moment, this price is imperceptible, but over time, it adds up.
And we haven't quite come to terms with the cost of constant distraction.
We treat it, I think, in this more general sense of, I probably should be less distracted,
and I think it's more urgent than people realize.
Today we look at the challenge of cultivating deep attention and what we gain by immersing ourselves in meaningful work.
I spoke to someone who might seem like an unlikely advocate for technological
restraint, a computer scientist.
Cal Newport is a computer science professor at Georgetown University.
He's deliberately tried to break away from the distractions of modern technology
and he's trying to get the rest of us to follow his lead.
Cal is the author of Deep Work, Rules for Focus Success in a Distracted World.
Cal, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Well, thanks for having me on.
You talk on your book about several highly influential thinkers, people like the psychiatrist
Carl Jung, the writer's Mark Twain, Jackie Rowling, and you say they all have a set of habits
that are quite striking in terms of how they're able
to get great work done.
This was something I noticed to us very common
to influential thinkers, is that they all seem to have this
drive to on a regular basis, cut themselves off
from their lives of busyness and communication and distraction
and isolate themselves to think deeply. What do they do specifically? Well what you'll notice is
that they often will have a location, a separate location they go to when they want to think deeply.
That's often cut off from the rest of their life. So Carl Jung would go out to the Bollinger Tower,
a stone house without
electricity or running water. He built by the lake side outside of a small village in the country's
side beyond Zurich. JK Rowling, when she was struggling to finish to Deathly Hallows,
rented out this big suite at the Belmore Hotel next to the big castle in downtown Edinburgh,
where she'd go and just think Harry Potter style thoughts. Mark Twain had a cabin for a long period of his life.
He would go to on the property of their house.
It was so far from the house that his family had
to blow a horn to try to catch his attention
and let him know that dinner was ready.
They go somewhere physically isolated and different
where they can without distraction think deeply.
What does work look like for the rest of us?
When you look at the average American worker, for example,
are most of us doing this kind of deep, sustained work?
The type of deep work I talk about is almost non-existent as far as I can tell in most knowledge work
positions, even when people think that they're single-tasking. They say, I've learned a lesson
that I'm not supposed to multitask. I'm not supposed to be on the phone and do email while I write. I'm just working on one
thing at a time. What they're still doing is every five or ten minutes a just
check. Let me just do a just check to my inbox. Let me just do a just check to my
phone real quick and then back to my work. And it feels like single tasking. It
feels like you're predominantly working on one thing, but even those very brief checks that switch your context even briefly can have this massive
negative impact on your cognitive performance, is to switch itself that hurts, not how long
you actually switch.
So I actually think even very conscientious knowledge workers who think they're pretty
good at focusing on one negative time are actually still working far from the sort of high
performance, deep work ideal.
What is the evidence that the switching causes harm to the quality of your
thinking?
Well, we've seen the show up in different types of scientific studies and from
different types of perspectives. I think one angle that makes it pretty clear
is to work that Professor Sophie Leroy has done on an effect called attention
residue.
This is actually something that's pretty easy to isolate in the laboratory.
You essentially give a subject something cognitively demanding to do that you can measure, like trying
to solve hard puzzles.
And then at some point, you distract them briefly as the experimenter, have them look at something
else change their context very briefly.
When they then turn back to the original, coagulid demanding task,
you see the performance drops.
And it drops for a while.
It takes a while for this attention residue to clear out.
And this is essentially what we're doing to ourselves when we do that quick glance at
the inbox or to the phone.
I'm talking with Carol Newport.
He is a computer science professor at Georgetown University and the author of Deep Work rules
for focus success in a distracted world.
Kalim wondering, do you think most of us are aware of the costs of distraction in our lives?
People, I think, intuit that they're too distracted and it's making them feel fragmented and exhausted
and anxious, but we treat it, I think, in this more general sense of, I probably should
be less distracted, and I think it's more urgent than people realize that if your brain is
how you make a living, then you really have to worry about this cognitive fitness.
I mean, how are you getting performance out of your brain? Are you taking care to get
good performance out of your brain or not? And people would probably be surprised the more
they think about it, how much they're
leaving on the table, by the way they're currently working.
Does it matter that most of us are not trying to win a Nobel Prize or a Pulitzer Prize,
that we're not necessarily genius?
Does it actually matter for most of us that we don't regularly put ourselves in a state
of deep work?
Well, this is a big shift that I think has happened in our economy because it's an
increasing portion of our economy because it's an increasing
portion of our economy that are essentially making a living by using their brain to process
information and produce new information.
And even if you're not trying to write great literature or solve a great theorem, if
you're using your brain primarily to produce value, be it writing, marketing, copy, or
putting together a new plan for your business start up. These type of things matter.
The human brain has become one of the main capital resources in our economy. It's what in the
knowledge economy we spend most of our money on is supporting human brains to process things and
produce value. So we should care. I think the ability to deep work would be relevant to the professional
success of almost everyone in the knowledge work field, which is a huge part of our economy. I'd like to run a little thought experiment.
Imagine we're following a doctor as she's making the rounds of a hospital, and she's looking at
many patients, and presumably the patients all present with different problems and complications
and so forth. And I think what we would expect is for this doctor to very quickly flip from one subject,
one topic, one patient to the next.
That if we, if the doctor were to say, you know, I can only do my best work.
If I can focus on one patient, deeply understand that case, spend a lot of time with it.
Yes, that might be true, but it's going to come at a cost, which is all the other patients
that the doctor is not going to see.
What are the costs of deep work? Well where I'd want to get with the doctor is just the ability even if you're
relatively briefly staying with each patient to actually be able to stay just with that patient.
So a case study I uncovered actually after the book came out was of two different groups at the same
elite level residency. One group had a culture of email.
So, hey, I need something here's a question,
what about this patient?
And they're expected that the constantly be available
by email, the other group consolidated
that type of administrative or logistical conversations
to set meetings.
And what the doctor from that hospital told me
is that they had a real hard time keeping people
in that first group, where in the second group people were much happier.
So deep work doesn't necessarily mean I can sit half a day and just think about this one
patient, but just the ability to walk into a room and just think about that patient and
not have to see 16 emails as you walk into the next room and have that eating away at
your attention, that can really make a big difference. You said that the people who were engaged in deep work ended up being happier, so it's
not just a question of being more productive, but you're making the case that deep work
produces a kind of intrinsic reward that doesn't come from being distracted?
It seems to, and in fact this caught me off guard when I was researching my book.
I ended up adding a chapter to the book that was not in the original proposal. That was all about these findings
I kept coming across and these stories I kept coming across about deep living, also just
being good living. People who spend a larger proportion of the professional time concentrating
intensely on a single high skill or high craft target, tend to enjoy their
work a lot more. There's a lot of different factors about why that might be true, but I ended
by saying a deep life is a good life. And that's something I really believe in. It can take
a knowledge work career and make it much more satisfying than being in a persistent state of
putting out fires and busy distraction. Can you cite any professions where deep work
is probably not called for and might even be a problem?
Sure, there's plenty of examples I think
where deep work is probably not that relevant.
A couple of the common examples I give is actually,
I think being a CEO of a large company,
you're probably going to better serve your company
or stockholders by being a decision
engine for other people who are doing deep work.
Someone who people can come to, okay, what about this?
What should we do here?
You can be a consistent source of the vision and push these decisions in a consistent way.
Another example is, let's say you're in what they would call here in DC, government relations,
where really most of what you do is context and connections and connecting the right people to the right other people and keeping up with what's going on in people's lives.
That's another example of a place where long solitary concentration is not going to make a difference.
I think there's plenty of jobs, in other words, in which deep work doesn't make a difference.
But I've also found, in my experience, that the number of jobs for which this is true is smaller than people expect. You make the argument in the book that there are lots of blue-collar
jobs, jobs where you're working with your hands, where deep work actually
produces much better work and also produces much better engagement with the work.
Right, I think the connection between concentration and craft is actually
clearer in a lot of these fields. If you talk to a craftsman,
they will tell you immediately. Well, obviously, obviously you need to focus intensely, otherwise
you're going to make a mistake, you're not going to produce the best quality work, you're going to
get feedback immediately that you are less effective if you're more distracted. And a big part of
the argument I'm making is that there's nothing different enough about a world that takes place on screens for this no longer to be true.
So if you talk to true craftsmen, they already know the power of deep work.
And so in some sense, we're just taking this message and bringing it up the speed for the 21st century.
It seems to me that there are connections here with ideas related to mindfulness,
or ideas related to flow that you should be in the moment focused on what you're doing.
It seems to me that those ideas are intimately connected with deep work.
They are connected.
So deep work can induce flow states, which is one of the reasons why people find a career
push more towards deep work is more satisfying.
It's not entirely synonymous with flow.
We know there's other types of states that also count as deep work that would not fall under
most definitions of flow.
So for example, being in a state of deliberate practice where you're systematically pushing
your skills past or you're comfortable so that you can improve, that's different than
a flow state.
It doesn't feel pleasurable.
You don't lose yourself in the time.
When you're practicing like that, you feel every single second because it's very difficult. But that also falls under the umbrella of deep work.
And what about mindfulness? The idea that we should just be immersed in what we are doing,
paying attention to what's going on in the moment.
There are connections to mindfulness. And one of the more important connections is that
we know from the study and practice of mindfulness, such as mindfulness meditation,
that getting better at that type of presence is something that requires practice and training.
And we see this exactly happening with deep work and a professional setting.
It's something that you train and get better at, just like you can get better at certain
types of meditation, that it's something you have to work at systematically.
It's a skill to be practiced, not a habit that you already know how to do and just try to make more time for.
Cal Newport is the author of the book Deepwork, rules for focus success in a distracted world.
When we come back, we'll talk about how you can retrain your mind to focus, to sit with a single idea for a long period of time. And we'll talk about whether creating a deep work culture for some people means that others will inevitably have to pick up
the slack.
I'm Shankar Vedantam and you're listening to Hidden Brain. Stay with us.
This is NPR.
Welcome back to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
I'm speaking to Kal Newport, a Georgetown University computer science professor, who's
the author of the book Deepwork.
It's about how we can cultivate the ability to focus on work, free of all distraction.
Kal leads an enormously disciplined life with lots of rules and rituals.
I asked him to explain how he structures his day to allow plenty of time for focused work.
There's a few things I do. One is I've never had a social media account and that's on purpose.
It's not that I think I'm better than social media but to quote George Packer's essay
on this is because I'm afraid I'll let my kids go hungry if I expose myself to that.
So that's one thing I do. Two, I'm very organized with my time.
I work during very set hours during the day
and I plan out the day like a chess player
moving the pieces around.
This is when I'm gonna work on win.
I don't let my mood dictate how my day unfolds.
And then three, I've made myself very comfortable
with annoying people.
I'm bad at email.
I have just set the expectations that I'm just not available a lot.
I'm not someone that you can expect a quick answer from.
And that also causes some trouble, of course, but all this adds up to allowing me to regularly
have long portions of many of my days focused on deeper thinking.
I understand you actually keep a tally
of how much deep work you've done,
how many hours you've spent being uninterrupted,
and you actually have targets that you must meet
at the end of the day or the end of the week.
Yeah, that's right.
This is something until recently I was doing,
I was tallying how many deep work hours,
so I had to confront that.
I had to confront the reality.
So if I was really avoiding deep work, I would see it.
I've since added a new habit to my arsenal here where I
now block out my deep work on my calendar up to four weeks in advance. So I have
that time protected so far out in the future that I can be sure it'll stay
protected. So now I have a record on my calendar of exactly what deep work I'm
doing. I understand you have a fairly structured approach to shutting down at the end of the day,
of making sure that the tasks that remain unfinished
don't bleed into your evening and your family life.
I have an actual ritual I do at the end of each workday
where it pretty systematically, I'll look at my weekly plan,
I'll look at my task licks, I'll look at my calendar,
make sure that nothing is left hanging,
and then I'll do a little shutdown mantra make sure that nothing is left hanging, and then
I'll do a little shutdown mantra. You'll say an actual phrase that means I'm now done
work for the day. What's the phrase that you tell yourself at the end of the day? I used
to be embarrassed to admit, the phrase was schedule shutdown complete, but I now have
this small but strong fan group that used that exact same phrase proudly.
So now I'm willing to admit,
it's schedule shut down complete.
Do you say this without this around?
No.
It doesn't really matter what the phrase is.
I invented that phrase when I was a graduate student
working on my dissertation.
It was really having a hard time with coming home
from the office and having all these concerns.
Hey, what if this proof never fixes or what if this proof breaks, what if my dissertation falls apart?
And I needed something to allow me to definitively shut down.
And so I was younger then, I came up with this phrase, but now it became habit, so I stuck with it.
Kyle Newport is a computer science professor at Georgetown University, and he's talking about his book Deepwork,
Rules for Focus Success in a Distracted World. Cal, what would you say to people who say,
you're asking us to turn into computers, you're asking us to behave like robots?
Well, see, I would argue that that's what people are doing right now. We've turned ourselves into
sort of human network routers. We just sit here and process messages
and sort through task lists and have this sense of busyness
that treats our mind like a digital computer processor,
something that you just feed instructions to
and it executes one after another.
I think what I'm doing is actually way more human.
This idea that our brain is not like a computer,
it's not like any other machine we know,
it's something that you have a personal connection to
and it's something that you really have to take care of,
something that you have to coax high performance out of.
So to have a structured day, for example,
to protect your mind from distraction,
I actually think makes you more human and less robotic
than what most people do,
which is to sit there like a human network router
and just sort of process messages and tasks all day
like a blind computer processor.
There seems to be a paradox here because I think what I'm hearing you say is that scheduling
yourself or even over scheduling yourself is the way to actually gain control over your
life. Whereas people would sort of say if you're actually scheduling every second and
sort of deciding four weeks ahead of time when you're going
to stop work on a certain Wednesday, you've actually turned yourself into a robot.
It's a paradox that shows up a lot. It confuses people, but I think you're right to point it
out is that if you study, especially really creative people, professional creatives, they
are surprisingly structured in how they approach their day. I took a quote at one point from
David Brooks to columnist
and I might be paraphrasing here.
But basically, he pointed out this observation that great creative thinkers approach their
time like accountants.
That this is this great disconnect is that they're very structured and systematic about their
time and produce the most unstructured, brilliant creative insights.
So it's a key paradox to point out because I really want to emphasize it. Adding structure and control
to your time really can be the key to getting the biggest insights and most interesting work produced.
I'm wondering if part of the tension comes about because we actually think of inspiration
as being the thing that strikes us unexpectedly. And I think the case that you're making is that
inspiration actually can be scheduled to arrive on command.
Well, Chuck Close said the artist's inspiration is for amateurs.
I think we over focus on the inspiration piece.
If you're systematically pushing yourself
and your knowledge and your craft,
you will have inspiration.
It'll happen in the shower, it'll happen while you walk to work. What's important is, you know, setting yourself up to have that
inspiration and then giving yourself the time and structure you need to act on it, to actually
produce something of value out of it. So I downplay the importance of inspiration and I emphasize
the importance of creating a life or inspiration as possible and you're well suited to act on it.
I want to ask you a couple of questions
that push back against this idea
from a practical standpoint.
What if people are in workplaces
where they have managers and bosses
who aren't enlightened enough to say,
yes, you should spend several hours engaged in deep work?
People can't always choose for themselves
what kind of work they pursue.
Something that has seemed to be effective is in that type of situation, having a conversation with whoever your boss is, whoever supervises you.
And so I want to talk about deep work. Here's what deep work is. I want to talk about non-deep worker shallow work.
And here's what that is. And both are important to my job. And I want to have a conversation and decide what should my ratio be?
That isn't a typical work week.
What ratio of my hours should be deep work versus shallow work?
And actually nailing down a number and aspirational target
that everyone agrees, yeah, this is right
for your position in our company.
It's not saying, hey, boss, stop emailing me so much.
You annoy me.
It's instead saying, hey, let's try to optimize myself.
So what should I be going for here?
Let me get your feedback on this.
And people are reporting back to me,
tales of drastic changes to work cultures.
Did they thought, there's no way?
There's no way I'm gonna get away with this.
I'm supposed to be on Slack all the time
or I'm supposed to be answering my emails all the time.
They have this conversation in the next week.
They're spending 50% of their hours on distracted.
So I've been pushing that particular managerial hack as a good positive way forward to trying
to fix some of these issues.
I'm wondering if some people might say your advice is really advice for people who in some
ways are at the top of their food chains.
So if you have an author who basically is able to say I'm going to disconnect
from the world for 18 months, I'm just going to focus on writing this book. You know, someone else
is probably picking up after this person in all kinds of different ways. If Cal Newport says,
you know, I'm going to close the door in my office, I'm not going to answer my phone, I'm not going
to check my email, but someone needs to get in touch with you in an emergency. That person
is probably going to reach an assistant of yours, and that assistant doesn't
have the same luxury of deep work as you do because he or she needs to be available to
hear what the emergency is or to hear what the request is.
Does having a group of people who are engaged in deep work necessarily mean they must be
essentially a second tier of workers who are engaged in shallow work to allow the deep thinkers to do that deep thinking.
It doesn't require that, but it usually requires some type of reconfiguration of communication channels and expectations.
So when I work for example with people maybe in a small consultancy that is client facing. Where they're used to this idea that clients
need to reach us issues pop up.
What's important there to enable more deep work,
which in the end produces more value for everyone,
is just to actually change the communication expectations.
That may be instead of having a client,
just have individual people's email addresses,
the company sets up an email address for that client.
And the company has set up some agreement on there in that there will always be someone monitoring
that and here's the expectation of when you can get a response.
Or maybe setting up a, sometimes called the bat phone or emergency phone idea, where you
say, okay, here's a, here's a number you can call me at.
If there's an emergency when I'm in one of these deep work sessions, people set these up
and say they get called maybe once a year.
So I don't think you need actual
extra people
involved to make space for DeBoard
But I do think it almost always requires some effort some sort of
Reconfiguration of people's expectations on on how and when they can reach you
So I'm gonna ask your question now that's part serious and part teasing
You and I was scheduled to talk last week,
and you didn't get the appointment down in your calendar,
and I was sitting here waiting for you,
and of course, this kind of thing happens all the time,
but in your case, I couldn't help but wonder,
did he miss this because he actually hadn't spent the time
doing the shallow work to get this in his calendar?
And is it possible that when we engage in deep work, we are essentially getting the benefit
of all of that deep work, we're getting the deep thinking, we're getting the accomplishments,
but some of the cost is borne by other people, and they might actually be the people who
are getting mad at you when they can't reach you?
Well, it's a good point, and I think that's actually was what happened because I spend a lot of time working
away from my computer.
These type of problems happen to me more often.
In this case, and I'm embarrassed it happened, but my vague memory was I saw this communication
on my phone because I had to be on there to send something to someone, but I was far away
from a computer.
I wasn't able to easily add it to a calendar.
And I was like, okay, I'll remember to do this
when I get back to my office next night for God.
And it did cause problems.
And so I'm embarrassed about it.
And that type of thing does happen.
And I think this hits on a big point,
which is deep work, or a professional life focused
on deep work, is less convenient for most people involved.
But on the other hand, I want to put out there this notion that that might not be so bad,
that it's possible that in this age of digital communication, we are focusing too much on
convenience over effectiveness.
I think in some ways what you're saying is also the tension between the short term and
the long term.
If I don't respond to a colleague's request or a manager's instructions to do something right away, it's irritating
for the person at the other end of the line. And so I think most of us actually conformed
to the social norm of saying, yes, I'm just going to be responsive, I'm going to be available,
I'm going to answer the question as soon as it's asked. The point that you're making, though,
is that they might be long term goals, deeper institutional goals that are essentially we're not thinking
about. And of course, when those goals are not met because they're not articulated,
no one notices their absence. So people will notice it if you don't show up at an interview,
people are not going to notice it if you don't write that bestseller or the next great idea. And so there's really a cultural bias in favor of the trivial over protecting what actually
is most important.
I really agree with that point, and I would add to it that I think a big part of it is
lack of metrics.
So if we look at two parallel case studies, two different industries.
Let's look at the industrial revolution
and the rise of mass industrial production. This was a world where the metrics for productivity
were very clear. How many cars per hour is our factory producing? And what we saw in that
world where bottom line value is very easy to measure is that very quickly the structure
of work moved away from what was convenient for the workers
and towards what produced more value. It moved away from the old system and factories where
you had people working teams at one spot in the floor to assemble the car towards things
like the assembly line, which are incredibly inconvenient. It's very hard to manage
the assembly line. It's very hard to get it right. It causes lots of issues. It's annoying,
but it produces a lot more value. You move to digital knowledge work. We don't have those metrics. It's
much harder to measure, okay, what's the cost to our bottom line if you're more distracted
or less distracted. And so my conjecture is that without those metrics, we are going to
fall back on these interpersonal or cultural biases. We're wired to be social. We don't want to upset someone.
These type of biases take over because it's much harder
to measure in this new world, the impact of different behaviors.
I'm wondering if there's also a psychological explanation
for the phenomenon you're describing.
I took a vacation a couple of weeks ago,
and for the first time in a long time,
I actually decided to unplug.
So I didn't
have internet access, I wasn't checking my email, I literally was cut off from things going
on at work. And when I got back there were a number of things that had happened in my
absence, some of which I wish I'd had the chance to weigh in on. But when I looked at the
aggregate, the overall conclusion I got was really that the world did just fine in my
absence.
Things went fine.
I actually wasn't as indispensable as I thought I was.
I'm wondering if that might be a psychological driver in people being unwilling to actually
cut themselves off, because not only might they discover that they are more productive,
but they might also discover the world is just fine.
Thank you very much without you.
Yeah, I think that's one of three big psychological drivers that have led us to this
world we're now of the sort of constant connectivity business. So that's certainly one, I think,
this notion of we get a sense of meeting and usefulness out of constantly being involved in
interaction. I think the other two psychological drivers, one is just we're wired to be tribal
and it's very difficult for us
psychologically to know there's an email waiting that we're not answering. And
even if we know for a fact that the person who sent that message does not need a
fast response, it still feels like we're at the tribal fire and there's a tribe
member standing there tapping you on the shoulder and you're ignoring them. We
just have a very hard time with that. And I think the third driver is knowledge work is much less structured.
And so how do you prove to your organization or to your boss that you're valuable?
And busyness as a proxy for productivity is something that a lot of people have defaulted
to.
Well, at the very least, if you see I'm sending lots of messages you know I'm working.
And so I think those three different factors are all intertwining to get us to this place,
where we find ourselves just constantly sending messages, as opposed to thinking hard thoughts or producing new things.
Kyle Newport is a computer science professor at Georgetown University.
He's the author of Deep Work, Rules for Focus Success in a Distracted World.
Kyle, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Well, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain. Oh, thank you.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
After the break, we'll go to a psychology lab
that's trying to help people bounce back
from interruptions more easily.
All it takes is a little electricity.
You should start to feel something pretty soon,
if you're already.
I'm feeling a very, very mild tingling.
That's coming up in just a moment.
I'm Shankar Vedantam and you're listening to Hidden Brain.
This is NPR.
This is Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Earlier in the show, I talked to the computer science professor
Kall Newport about how important and rare it is these days
to carve
out time for uninterrupted work. He shared some ideas about how to develop deep
attention. These ideas, no surprise, require real commitment and resolve. So I
decided to explore a shortcut. A few months ago I was driving to Virginia for
an interview and I was doing the opposite of D-Frog.
I was watching the road paying attention to GPS directions and I was listening to an interview
I had conducted years ago with a researcher Eric Lumber.
I was on my way to an interview with one of Eric's colleagues and I needed to re-familiarize
myself with the material.
So the irony here of course is that I'm heading to an interview
about interruptions while being constantly interrupted.
The interview I was going to was about how to deal
with interruptions and distractions.
Now, there's no question.
I'd love to do my deep thinking
and the kinds of places Cal Newport described, places like Carl Jung's Lakeside House and the Swiss
countryside or JK Rowling's Suite in Edinburgh. But since I've chosen a life in
public radio, I need something a little more... I was gonna say cheap, but why
don't we say practical? That's where Eric and his colleague Melissa
Scheldrup come in. They're exploring a relatively simple solution to the problem of interruptions and overwork.
Basically, you run a small electrical current through part of the brain and voila!
It's easier to manage interruptions.
It's now year since this interview with Eric, a new researcher has taken over the project
and I'm heading to the lab along with my producer, Raina Cohen.
I've offered myself over as a guinea pig for the experiment and
I'm a little worried. The squeals of pain coming from the host is what makes this worthwhile.
Rayna doesn't show much sympathy. Putting your money where your math is, you've been
reaping the rewards of the many undergraduate students who have subjected themselves
to social science research and now you have to be part of it.
Faire is fair.
As fair as it might be,
the idea of running an electrical current through my head
is not exactly appealing,
but the possibility that I could juggle
the many demands on my time, that's irresistible.
Something hugely seductive about this idea
that you can wear a helmet
and instead of being able to do one thing at a time
You can now do four things at a time
Wait, which way am I going now?
I decided to turn off the interview with Eric and focus on the road
Once I make it at the campus of George Mason I find my way to Melissa's lab. It turns out to be less sci-fi
find my way to Melissa's lab. It turns out to be less sci-fi than grunge.
They keep us grad students' placements,
so I can't go through the no window.
This is Melissa Scheldrup, Eric's colleague
and my guide for the experiment.
I am a sixth year graduate student in the PhD program
at George Mason University in the Human Factors
and Applied Cognition program.
She takes me to her office.
The room has white walls, fluorescent lights, no windows.
Stacked cardboard boxes and stray electronics are strewn around. Old computers, new computers,
a microwave for some reason. Melissa's work at the Human Factors in Applied Cognition Research Lab
is inspired by a single insight. There's a reason some people bounce back from interruptions quickly
and other people don't. One thought with interruptions is that they are highly dependent on a person's working
memory capacity, so your natural ability to manipulate information in your brain.
People who are generally good at that have less of a negative effect of interruptions
and people who are not so good at it seem to be affected more. Melissa and her colleagues want to know if there's a way to improve working memory.
In other words, can you help people hold more information in their heads?
If you can do this, interruptions might not be such a big problem.
That brings us to the brain's app.
If you want to influence how people deal with interruptions,
it makes sense to try and stimulate a part of the brain that handles working memory, the prefrontal cortex.
Very simplistically, it's like a 9 volt battery that we have electrodes attached to, and depending on where you put the electrodes on the brain, you can either make it more difficult for neurons to fire or make it more easy for them to fire.
Scientists have long inserted electrodes into the brain
to change the way the brain works.
Doing this helps patients with serious disorders
like Parkinson's disease.
I've signed up for a much less invasive procedure
and electrode attached to the side of my head.
Now, obviously, running a small current through the brain
is a crude way to change how it works.
So this really is a little bit like just
slapping the side of the television set, isn't it?
There's a lot of that.
Yep, there's a lot of wiggle room in how it works.
I'm often juggling multiple things at the same time.
So what would be your hypothesis
on what the effect is of this helmet
on my behavior and performance?
I would, if we're gonna extend it out there to your entire life, it should, in theory,
help you juggle all the multitask you have going on.
If you need a working memory boost, then it will allow you to focus on one thing, stop
focusing on that, move to something else, and then go back and pick up where you were
without much of a degradation of performance, ideally.
That's the goal.
And what is the potential downside?
Well, if you were to invest in a system like this,
there's no guarantee it's going to work.
There's really no negative effects
that have been associated with it.
There's always a possibility that we're
heading the wrong area in the brain.
We don't do brain scans before we do this on people
because it is pretty diffuse.
So we could be you know accidentally
While enhancing your working memory. We could also be hurting your verbal skills. Oh great
So yes, but it's it's all transitori
It's gonna stop once the stimulation stops are shortly thereafter. So it's it's not permanent
The electrical stimulation won't affect me permanently
But what about helping me deal with interruptions in the short term?
To find out Melissa has me play a computer game.
So you're going to be playing a game called Worship Commander?
It looks a lot like battleship. It has a 1990s video game feel to it.
There's a very dark blue background, and my ship is at the bottom of the screen,
and planes of different kinds are coming in from the top.
I have to shoot down enemy planes and let friendly ones get through.
There are lots and lots of rules.
If it is an enemy, you warn it, here with the warn button, wait 5 seconds and then fire
on it.
Red planes are enemies, blue planes are friends, but then there are yellow planes, which
could be either friend or foe.
If it's yellow, what you'll need to do is click on it, find the highlighted number
here on the side, click on that, and then it will tell you here in the communications window
if it's a friend or a foe.
Okay, click this button to shoot down foes, make sure you don't shoot friends, and a complicated
system to figure out who is who.
I'm ready to go, but those are all just the rules
of the main task. While you're doing that, you're going to be hearing some information from the
rest of your staff on the worship. And it's going to be things like your current water level is
355, our current communications channel is Oscar. And they're going to be giving you several updates while you're playing.
Are these updates relevant to the game or can I just ignore them?
So then somebody's going to come on and ask you, all right, what's the current
communication?
Oh, right.
So that's the interrupting task, then you need to answer the question and then you can
go back to what you're doing.
So there are lots of rules and lots of moving parts.
Naturally I do the mature thing and make up excuses even before the game starts.
Can I just say that your volunteers don't have to play the game with a microphone
one inch in front of their mouths?
If you would like to have that as a caveat and a handicap, then yeah, you can put that on there.
I play a practice run.
All right, I'm still getting used to all the elements of the game.
Was I listening to what?
The current course.
Uh, no, I have no idea what the current course is.
You have 10 seconds of answer and then it goes away, so you'll get the next one.
Now that I know the rules, I start a new game.
This time, the results count.
They're going to give me a baseline score that Melissa can later compare to how I do with the electrodes on.
I destroy some enemy planes.
I get a few things right.
Yes.
Though I also lose my cool.
I warn you.
But I'm kind of fine.
Yeah, and it's not fine.
You have to wait five seconds.
You have to give him a chance to get out of your airspace.
And I make some mistakes.
What is that current course?
I think it's 030.
I think.
Oh no, I guess not.
Once the game is over, Melissa gives me a performance evaluation.
She thinks I did. Okay.
You were very focused on the primary task, and not so much the interruption task.
So what do we know next, and how do you improve my performance?
All right, so now we put on the helmet.
Melissa put some things on the table.
A little black box with knobs,
which is known as a trans-cranial direct currents
simulation unit.
Some cords,
electrodes which look like squares
that have rubber on the edges
and thin sponges in the middle.
Melissa prepares my head and arm
before she attaches the electrodes.
Don't be nervous.
Don't be nervous.
It's not nervous, not nervous, not nervous.
It's all great.
All great. I will live. I'm an expert.
Yes. Sort of. She wipes a spot on my forehead, then on my upper arm. She picks up a syringe
to add saline to the electrodes. Before I came to the lab, I thought it was going to be
wearing a helmet for this experiment, so I asked Melissa why she isn't giving me one.
It turns out the helmet is still in the idea stage.
A standard helmet won't work because everyone has a different head size.
What I get instead are white bandages wrapped around my head and arm.
There's no mirror, so the only two people in the room with me, Melissa and my producer,
they tell me how I look.
You kind of look like a World War I patient that got hit in the head and has a white band
around your forehead.
This is really like Richard Simmons sweat band plus like the cable that you put in the
back of the TV to set up the audio, like a little red plug.
Yeah, yeah, it looks a lot like that.
Then there's my arm.
The electrode feels like a medical device.
Which looks kind of like a blood pressure cuff?
Melissa asks me if I'm ready, and I say yes.
You should start to feel something pretty soon, if you don't already.
I'm feeling a very very mild tingling
it feels
I how to describe it but just like a
Slightly burning sensation, but it's fairly mild and it's fairly focused and intense and it's right over my
right
Temple
With electricity running through my skull, I start the game again.
Alright.
New and improved chunker with superpowers of concentration.
I'm going to start the experiment now.
This time I get four out of six questions right on the interruption task.
I improved.
But that could be just a fluke.
I think so.
I play another game.
You got them all right.
Alright.
Melissa explains exactly what all the plane destroying and messages about freshwater levels
actually reveal about my working memory.
I have to remember the game's complicated rules.
That takes up some of my working memory.
I have to keep track of the constant verbal updates.
These interruptions mean I have to store all this information in my head,
even as I'm trying to keep enemy planes from blowing me up.
The key thing that Melissa is measuring about the interruptions is...
What happens after you respond to that task?
Are you able to go back right away and pick up where you were?
How would you say I performed?
You performed pretty well for being your second game or third
game. You did pretty well especially with the interrupting task. I was very
impressed. Normally we have to remind people that they need to focus on that and
try it. Do you think that the electrodes made a difference? As a scientist I
cannot say that with an end of one and two games. It's very rare you see
something that's like you can identify visually that somebody is better from intervention
Right away like this and so it's over time looking at data
So I could go looking at your data and look at during the practice games
What happened after you answer those questions?
How long did it take you to make your next step?
Did you make the correct next step?
Did you go back?
Did you skip things?
And then compare them numerically to how you did with the electrodes on. I asked Melissa if I should strap electrodes to my head when I'm
dealing with interruptions at work. You could do that. This probably isn't the
best real-world technique, but there are it informs other techniques. So if we
know that modulating working memory performance or working memory ability
affects these things, then we can say what techniques can maybe supplement
your working memory.
When Melissa and her colleagues analyze the results,
they take all kinds of factors into account.
For example, it may be that people are better
at multitasking after some time,
just because they've had more practice with the game.
It might be that when they wear the electrodes,
there's a placebo effect going on,
they think they're gonna do better,
and so they actually do better.
But when Melissa and her colleagues take all of this and other factors into account, the
electrodes still seem to make a difference.
So I have a question that's not really a science question, it might be more of a philosophical
question.
I remember when we started using smartphones and they seemed like enormous time saving
devices, they allowed you to do in five minutes what used to take you two hours.
And initially, the argument was, you now are gonna have
an hour and 55 minutes to take a walk in the park
and smell the roses.
But of course, that isn't what happened.
We just fill the hour and 55 minutes
with other stuff to do.
And now you're just as busy,
probably even more busy than you were before,
except you're doing 20 tasks instead of one.
And I'm wondering, as we come up with these techniques that might actually improve the
efficiency with which our brains work, is it possible that we'll just simply use the balance
of time to do even more stuff?
I think that's exactly correct.
There's a debate going on in this field and in cybernics in general, should we really
be doing these things?
Is it really helpful to humanity or the person?
And my feeling is that we've always made technological advances
and they've always been at the aim of making things easier for humans
and also think that you have a choice, right?
You can choose to use these tools to make you more efficient
and then go on a hike or a walk.
Or you can choose to use these tools to make you more efficient and then go on a hike or a walk. Or you can choose to use these tools to make you more efficient and then you go do more work.
That is a personal choice that I think everyone has to make.
We were just talking with Kal Newport. He's a professor of computer science at Georgetown
University and he's the author of a new book that looks at Deep Work, the idea that we are doing
too many things and the way to actually be less busy and to be more focused is actually just
to be less busy, to take on fewer things, to say no to many more things, and to carve out time
where we can actually stay and focus on things. And I'm wondering what he would say to this kind of
intervention. And I think he would say you're trying to find sort of a technical solution to what
is really a human behavior problem. And the technical solution is let's make the brain 5% better than it was before,
but of course when you do that, you're just going to take on 10% more work.
Yeah, I personally don't think that TDCS should be used in some of these everyday life.
It should be used as a tool to look at the underlying physiological process.
So I don't think that everybody should have a helmet that has this.
It's like cheating.
And so what really needs to be done is have people out in the forefront who understand these
issues and then they can present it to the general public in a way that makes sense.
So yes, we have this ability to change the, you know, neural functioning of your brain
within a few minutes,
but here's how and why we should use that,
and here's how we shouldn't use that,
and really have a lot of thought put into it
for introducing these things into the public.
Hmm.
Because in some ways I'm wondering,
you know, what we lack is not sort of our ability
to multitask, but our ability to actually sit with things.
Really, I think that is a more like
cultural and societal issue that we have.
So, you know, I know some people who are really good at saying,
no, I just, I don't wanna do that.
And then I know other people who would never say no
to an opportunity, even though it means more work.
And as a graduate student, I can fully attest to that.
And I'm sure, I'll help you out, sure, I'll do this.
I don't need to sleep, it's fine.
I'm in the gym in six months.
And so I think that's more of a cultural thing
and needs to be something that's addressed.
And that people in technology, sectors, or in science,
if we allow them to go on a hike and a walk,
that's been shown to sort of give you
these aha moments and actually help your cognition.
And so if we change the way we thought about it that way,
where yes, we're going to make this more efficient,
but that rest of the time is yours,
instead of, we're going to make this more efficient,
and that time is still mine.
That would be my ultimate solution.
Each year, we learn a whole lot more about how the brain works.
In the future, maybe we will have helmets
that we can wear at work.
They'll allow us to be more focused or juggle multiple demands.
There's nothing wrong with trying to get the most out of our brains, any more than there's
something wrong and trying to get the most out of our legs or our hands.
If there are machines that can help us lift heavier things than we ever thought possible,
and machines that can help us move faster than we ever imagined,
there are certainly going to be machines one day to help us think faster or more clearly.
In fact, you can argue this is exactly what an education does.
You spend years in school or hours reading books or listening to a radio show like this
one to improve how your brain works.
But in the end, technology is just a tool.
We need wisdom to know how to use it.
A helmet or a phone can't tell you if it's a good idea to push your brain to work twice as fast
or if working too hard might make you unhappy.
For those answers, you need that leg side retreat
or at least a quiet walk in the woods.
acquired walk in the woods.
This episode was produced by Raina Cohen and edited by Tara Boyle. Our team includes Jennie Schmidt, Maggie Pennman, Renée Clar and Bart Schaude.
NPR's vice president for programming and audience development is Anja Grunman.
If you like the show, check out our weekly podcast.
Search for Hidden Brain on NPR1 iTunes or wherever you find your podcast.
You can also follow the show on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and listen to my stories on morning edition.
I'm Shankar Vedantam, see you next week.
System shut down complete.
System shut down complete.