Huberman Lab - Optimizing Workspace for Productivity, Focus, & Creativity
Episode Date: January 31, 2022In this episode, I discuss ways to set up your workspace to optimize productivity, focus and creativity. I discuss how to adjust light, physically arrange your work environment, and leverage body post...ure to enhance productivity. Additionally, I explore how to shift your work environment for particular types of tasks. Moreover, I review the role of body movement in the workspace. I also discuss sound-based tools that can either enhance or diminish cognitive functioning (the ability to focus on deep work). I describe a particular frequency of binaural beats that studies show can be used to enhance memory and recall. This episode covers quality peer-reviewed findings practical tools anyone can use, regardless of budget, in order to optimize their workspace to achieve heightened levels of productivity, increased alertness and focus, and creativity. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Arranging Environment for Focus (00:02:44) Sponsors: AG1, LMNT (00:07:55) How to Increase Focus (00:10:02) Lighting Your Work in Phase 1 (00:16:00) Lighting Your Work in Phase 2 (00:19:45) Lighting Your Work in Phase 3 (00:24:17) Where to Look While You Work (00:28:02) Arranging Your Environment (00:31:24) Body Posture (00:34:22) How Long to Do Deep Work (00:36:50) Set the Right Visual Window Size (00:42:15) 45 min / 5 min Rule (00:44:23) The Cathedral Effect: Analytic vs Creative Work (00:55:50) Leveraging Background Noise (01:02:20) Binaural Beats for Work (01:06:38) The Best Binaural Frequency for Work (01:11:17) How Binaural Beats Increase Focus (01:13:56) Minimizing Interruptions (01:20:01) Sit or Stand, or Both? (01:25:18) Movement in the Workspace (01:31:00) Summary & Shifting Work Environments (01:39:36) Zero-Cost Support, Sponsors, Instagram, Twitter, Supplements Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today, we're going to talk all about how to optimize your workspace for maximum productivity.
Indeed, that means to heighten levels of focus, to increased levels of creativity, to improve
your ability to task switch.
And this could be for Saco School or for work, creative endeavors, personal endeavors.
This really extends to everybody.
Most often when we hear about how to focus or how to get the most out of our work sessions,
we hear about the biology and the psychology of that.
We hear about dopamine and we hear about serotonin
and we hear about caffeine.
And indeed, those are topics that I've covered a lot
on the Huberman lab podcast.
Today, we will touch on each of those,
but we are mainly going to focus on
how we arrange our physical environment
and indeed how we arrange ourselves
in that physical environment
in order to bring out the best in our neurobiology.
That is how to put ourselves into a heightened state of focus
by virtue of things as simple as where we place our screen
relative to our eyes at a given time of day.
Believe it or not, there's excellent research on this
and there's excellent research, for instance,
on whether or not you should or should not listen to music,
whether or not you should use things like binaural beats.
And if so, what frequency of binaural beats?
We are going to cover all of that.
And by the end, you will have a checklist of things
that you can do to optimize your workspace on any budget.
I will mention various products and apps
that some of you might find useful for optimizing your workspace.
But I want to emphasize at the outset that none of those
that I mention are any products or apps
that we have a financial relationship to.
And more importantly, you don't need them.
I'm going to explain how for zero cost,
you can arrange your workspace in ways
that makes you maximally productive, maximally focused,
and allows you to adapt your workspace
to different environments, whether or not you're traveling,
working with others, working alone, et cetera.
Just to give you a little hint of where we are going,
I will mention a zero-cost app that will deliver
binoral beats at a particular frequency that peer-reviewed
research has shown can enhance certain types of learning
and memory. However, peer-reviewed research also shows
that it can diminish performance in other types of tasks.
So stay tuned, we'll go into all the details so that you can
optimize your workspace for zero-cost and get the most out of your efforts and endeavors.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching
and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information
about science and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is Athletic Greens.
Athletic Greens is an all-in-one vitamin mineral probiotic drink.
I've been taking Athletic Greens since 2012, so I'm delighted that they're sponsoring
the podcast.
The reason I started taking Athletic Greens and the reason I still take Athletic Greens
once or twice a day is that it helps me cover all of my basic nutritional needs.
It makes up for any deficiencies that I might have.
In addition, it has probiotics,
which are vital for microbiome health.
I've done a couple of episodes now
on the so-called gut microbiome
and the ways in which the microbiome interacts
with your immune system, with your brain to regulate mood,
and essentially with every biological system relevant
to health throughout your brain and body.
With athletic greens, I get the vitamins I need,
the minerals I need, and the probiotics
to support my microbiome.
If you'd like to try athletic greens,
you can go to atlettagreens.com slash Huberman
and claim a special offer.
They'll give you five free travel packs,
plus a year supply of vitamin D3K2.
There are a ton of data now showing that vitamin D3
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in the body, and so on.
Again go to atlettagreens.com slash uberman to claim the special offer of the 5 free travel
packs and the year supply of vitamin D3 K2.
Today's episode is also brought to us by Element.
Element is an electrolyte drink that has everything you need
and nothing you don't.
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Let's talk about workspace optimization.
This is a topic that's intrigued me for a very long time because my undergraduate advisor,
my graduate advisor and my postdoc advisor,
had many things in common, including being great scientists, being kind people and terrific
mentors, but they had another thing in common, which always perplexed me, which is that their
offices were a complete disaster.
They had mountains of books, mountains of papers, mountains of all sorts of stuff, and yet all of them were
extremely productive and could remain extremely focused in that incredibly cluttered environment.
I'm somebody who doesn't like clutter. I find it very hard to focus in cluttered environments.
And indeed, there's tremendous variation among people as to whether or not they can remain focused
or whether or not they struggle to focus in physically cluttered environments. There's no right
or wrong to this.
But the question we should ask ourselves is, why were they all able to be so focused?
And it turns out that the reason they were able to be so focused is that they all captured
one single and yet fundamental variable of workspace optimization.
And we'll talk about what that variable is.
In fact, we're going to talk about what all the variables of optimizing a workspace are.
Things like vision, things like light,
things like noise in the room,
whether or not you listen to music or not,
whether or not you use noise canceling headphones or not.
We're going to talk about all of that
and we're going to do that in a way
that you can optimize your workspace
regardless of whether or not you are at home,
whether or not you're on the road, et cetera.
Because the last thing I would ever want to do
is to create a situation where you find the optimal workspace
and then you are a slave to that optimal workspace.
That's just not the way the world works.
What you want to do, or my goal for you, rather,
is that you will have a short checklist of things
that you can look to any time you sit down to do work
and you can think about the underlying variables
that impact your brain and your body
and allow your brain and body to get into the optimal state
in order to learn, in order to be productive,
and indeed to move through your workbouts
in a very relaxed and pleasurable way
while maintaining focus,
and while pursuing any of the number of things that you're doing.
The first variable we want to think about
in terms of workspace optimization is vision
and light.
Now, on a previous episode of the Hubertman Lab podcast devoted all to habits, I talked
about the importance of dividing your 24-hour day into three different phases.
And for those of you that haven't heard that episode, I'm just going to briefly summarize
what I described.
From the time you wake up in the morning until about six or seven or eight, sometimes
nine hours later, your brain is in a unique state.
It is in a state of high levels of dopamine, a neuromodulator, and high levels of epinephrine,
as well as hormones like cortisol and so forth.
Without going into the biology of those things, they set your brain into a state of high alertness. And this is true, rather, or not you indulge in caffeine or not. I
know some of you say, Oh, I really don't wake up until the afternoon. I'm much more alert
and focused in the afternoon. We will talk about that phase of the 24 hour day in a moment.
But that early part of the day is a time of day in which for sake of workspace optimization, being in a brightly lit environment
can lend itself to optimal work throughout the day, not just during that early phase.
And so while on many episodes of this podcast, I've also emphasized the importance of getting
morning sunlight in your eyes within 30 to 60 minutes of waking, not as often, but now and again, I will also mention that it's important to light your
daytime environment as brightly as you safely can.
So if you are going to be doing work in this early, what I call phase one portion of your
day, you want to have as much light and indeed as much overhead light shining on you as safely
possible.
Now, of course, you don't want to so bright that it's glaring and you have to squint,
et cetera.
But you want as much light as as safely possible.
And you can do that a couple of simple ways.
One is if you do own or you're in an environment where you have overhead lights, turn on those
overhead lights.
What's special about overhead lights for setting alertness is that the neurons in our eyes,
which are called melanopsin ganglion cells,
that's the fancy name, melanopsin ganglion cells,
are mainly enriched in the lower half of our retinas
in our eyes and view the upper visual field.
Those neurons send little wires to an area of our hypothalamus
right above the roof of our mouth
that creates a state of alertness.
Now, early in the day, we want to be as alert as possible.
And this phase one of our circadian cycle
is when we are best at doing analytic detail type work.
So we're going to go into other aspects of workspace optimization
that are important for phase one.
But during phase one, again, within zero to about eight or nine hours after waking,
bright lights in your environment, in particular overhead lights,
are going to facilitate focus,
they're going to facilitate further release
of things like dopamine and norepinephrine
and healthy amounts of cortisol.
And we want that to happen early in the day
for a variety of reasons.
For instance, we don't want that cortisol peak
to happen too late in the day.
That's actually associated with depression
and an insomnia and a number of things
that we just don't want.
So one of the things that I've done for my workspace
is to make sure that when I wake up in the morning,
I do go get my sunlight.
If the sun isn't out, I turn on as many bright artificial
lights as I can manage or tolerate,
and then I go get my sunlight exposure.
But once I set out to do some work
that all the overhead lights in that rumor on,
as well as lights in front of me.
And that's again, to stimulate heightened levels of focus and further release of these
neuromodulators I mentioned before.
Dopamine, Neuropanephrine, and epinephrine.
Now the way that one could do that could be a very low cost way of having, for instance,
a desk lamp and those overhead lights.
If you're somebody that wants to take this to the next level, you can purchase a ring
light, which is, I think those are mainly made for people doing selfie-type videos, you know, for Instagram posts and things of that
sort.
Ring lights can be pretty cost-effective.
And yet they're very bright, and they have the sort of bright blue light that is going
to optimally stimulate those melanopsin gangling cells.
So some people I know will have a blue light or a bright LED on their desk in front of them.
And indeed, I have one of these.
I don't use a ring light.
I use a light pad.
The particular light pad I use, I bought on Amazon.
I can mention the brand, but again, I have no financial affiliation to them.
This is the Artograph light pad.
It's designed for drawing.
And it says on it 930 lux.
Lux is just a measure of brightness.
So I placed that on the desk in front of me and I turn it on essentially throughout this
phase one of the day.
Even if I walk away from the desk, I tend to keep it on.
It doesn't consume that much energy.
And in that way, I'm constantly being bombarded with photons that keep my levels of alertness
up because the early part of the day is when I do the majority of that focused work.
Again, you don't need the light pad.
You can use a ring light or you can simply use any kind of other lights that you might happen to have artificial lights. For those of
you that can place your desk near a window and even better to open the window, that would be really
fantastic. I don't have access to that. Why would I say open the window? Well, it turns out that
sunlight is going to be the best stimulus for waking up your brain and body through this melanopsin
to hypothalinous system.
And by looking at sunlight through a window, it's 50, 50 times less effective than if
that window were to be open.
Mostly because those windows filter out a lot of the wavelengths of blue light that are
essential for stimulating the eyes and this wake up signal.
So all of this is rests on the premise that we need to be alert in order to do our work.
In particular, focused work,
and I've talked about before in the habits episode,
and I'm saying again now, that first phase of the day,
that first seven or eight or nine hours of the day
is really the time in which our neurochemistry
is primed for getting the most amount of focused,
kind of challenging work done,
where a lot of precision and detail is required.
So you want to brightly light your work environment during that first phase, again, from the time
you wake up, try and get sunlight, but then even if you're going to get exercise or do other
things, you want to get as much bright light in your eyes as you safely can, and then you
want to light your work environment.
Now in the afternoon, starting at about nine and continuing until about 16 hours
after waking, you want to start dimming the lights in that environment. Now you don't want
to make it dark because you don't want to get sleepy at two o'clock in the afternoon
unless you're going to take a brief nap, which I do and is perfectly fine as long as it
doesn't interfere with your nighttime sleep. But the idea is that in this so-called phase two of the 24 hour cycle, from about
nine to 16 hours after waking, you want to bring the level of lights down a bit. And when
I say down, I literally mean down. Having lights that are in front of you is fine. But
overhead lights at that time are not going to be optimal for the sorts of neurochemical
states that your brain wants to be in.
The states that I'm referring to are a shift from the dopamine and norepinephrine that's
highest early in the day to increases in things like serotonin and other neuromodulators that
put your brain into a state that's better for creative endeavors or for more abstract
thinking.
Now, as we'll soon see, there are other things you can do to improve creative thinking and abstract thinking. And in fact, there are things you can do to improve analytic thinking. Now as we'll soon see there are other things you can do to improve creative thinking and abstract thinking and in fact there are things you can do to
improve analytic thinking we will talk about those things that are distinct from
light but right now we're just focusing on light so what I recommend doing
and what I personally do is I will turn off overhead lights in the afternoon.
It's not completely dim it's not completely dark but I will start to reduce
the amount of overhead light and just simply keep the light pad on and whatever other lamps I happen to be using.
One thing we haven't talked about is screen brightness.
This is highly individual.
People have different retinal sensitivities.
What I mean by that is everybody differs in terms of how bright they can tolerate their
visual environment and their screen.
And whether or not you are sensitive to light or not, we'll depend on a lot of factors. Some of it is eye color. Indeed, people with darker color eyes
generally can tolerate more bright light than others. I have green eyes. I am very, very sensitive
to light. If I'm outdoors at a cafe or something in the table has any kind of reflective properties
and it's a sunny day, I can barely see the person across the table for me unless I'm wearing sunglasses.
Some people, other members of my family, for instance, have dark brown eyes and can just sit there
and have a conversation without the need for sunglasses at all. So that's, there's tremendous variation.
There one or the other isn't healthy or advantageous necessarily. Just understand that you never want to
be in an environment where it's painful to maintain
looking at whatever it is that you're looking at.
If something's painful to look at, it could be damaging to your eyes, so you do want to
protect your eyes.
Now, in this second phase of the day, since most of us are working indoors, but even if
you're working outdoors, you want to try and get the amount of light reduced overall,
but in particular, that overhead light.
And you also want to start reducing the amount of blue light that you're being exposed to. So somewhere
around 4 or 5 pm, which for me is, you know, about 12 hours after I've been awake
or 14 hours after I've been awake, I will turn off that light pad and start to
transition the lights in my environment to more yellows and reds. Now I can't
always do this. I have friends that actually have converted their entire homes
from blue light early in the day to red light late in the day.
That's really cool and fantastic.
I haven't done that.
There's a cost to doing that.
And it is optimal in terms of optimizing productivity
and sleep and so forth,
but it's not feasible for a lot of people.
But what I do is I simply switch to using yellow lamps.
I will turn off that LED in the later afternoon again around 4 or 5 pm
And I tend to wake up around 6 a.m. Or so
I'll turn those off and what I'll try and do also is I'll try and dim the screen that I'm working on so that I can still manage to see
Everything that I need to see but it's quite a bit dimmer than it was early in the day
So that's phase two of the day and that's how we wanna think about light.
And then I'll just mention
because I know there are people
who are working in the middle of the night.
There's phase three, which is about 17 to 24 hours
after waking.
And I realize that for shift workers
or for people that are pulling all nighters
or for students, oftentimes you need to be awake
and studying in the middle of the night.
I myself, in somebody who for years,
would pull anywhere from five to 10 all nighters per year, I still pull in all nighter now and again
because of deadlines and so forth. I don't recommend it. If you can avoid it great, but
many people just simply have to do this for sake of shift work or because of impending
deadlines or procrastination or all of the above. If you're going to be doing work in
that third phase of your circadian cycle, You really want to limit the amount of bright light that you're getting in your eyes to just
the amount that allows you to do the work that you're doing.
Because if you get light in your eyes that's any brighter than that, you're going to severely
deplete your melatonin levels.
You're going to severely shift your circadian clock and it's effectively like traveling to
another time zone.
So if you stay up from 3am until 6am or 6 a.m. or 2 a.m. until 4 a.m. working on a term paper
or something of that sort and you're getting bright light in your eyes, you are effectively
flying six hours to a different time zone.
Or at least that's what your body registers it has.
And it can really throw your sleep in your metabolism and a number of other things out of
whack.
Now, there's an exception to this, which is if you really want to be awake,
it can often be beneficial to flipping on all the lights in the room and keeping them
really bright. One of the hardest things to do is to stay up all night studying
when you're in a dim environment. So you have to determine the trade off
between whether or not you want to shift your clock or whether or not you want to get
the work done. And I would say the ideal situation is to sleep at night and to do your work during the day
and in the afternoon.
But if you do have to be awake in the middle of the night,
do understand that you want to dim those lights overall.
You would not want to use that LED,
you would not want to have overhead lights on
unless you're really struggling to stay awake,
in which case you want to get as many bright lights on
as possible.
So there are a couple of tricks to all nighters.
I don't really want people pulling all nighters
unless they have to, but there are a few things
that you can do without taking stimulants in order to stay up all night that can be beneficial
that maximize on your biology.
One of them that's a little less commonly known is you can drink 32 ounces of water and
commit to not going to the bathroom for 90 minutes at least.
Turns out that there's a circuit that goes from your bladder, literally neurons that go from your bladder to your brainstem.
And when you have to urinate, it makes you very alert as many of you have probably experienced.
This is actually what wakes us up in the middle of the night when we have to use the bathroom,
is this circuit for alertness that goes from full bladder, it's signaled by the bladder
being full to the brainstem.
And this is the circuit that is disrupted in kids that have bed wetting issues.
And there are a number of cognitive behavioral approaches to that.
Sometimes bed wetting in very young kids is because the circuit hasn't developed yet.
Most adults, fortunately, are not bed wetting, but you can increase the amount of alertness
in your system and remain awake in the middle of the night by drinking a little bit more
water than you normally would, and then refraining from going to the restroom.
That certainly will lend going to the restroom.
That certainly will lend itself to alertness.
You know how difficult it is to fall asleep when you have to use the restroom, for instance.
So that's one tool.
The other thing is, again, to flip on as many bright lights in the environment as possible.
And then, of course, people will rely on stimulants like caffeine or even more aggressive stimulants.
That's not something I necessarily recommend.
You'll each have to determine that for you.
But if you do, in fact, have to use all
nitres for any reason, you can maximize this bladder to brain
approach and the bright light approach. Okay, so that more or less covers
how bright to keep your overall environment and how bright to keep your
screen. If you really want to get nerdy about this, there is a free app
called light meter where you can start measuring how many locks, how many
photons are in a given environment. It's actually measuring reflectance of free app called light meter where you can start measuring how many locks, how many photons
are in a given environment. It's actually measuring reflectance of photons and so on. If you can
look up what a locks meter does, if you like, I don't necessarily recommend doing that. I don't
want to set a critical threshold by which, you know, for instance, we say once your environment is
more than 1500 locks, then it's too bright or not bright enough, etc. Everyone has different
retinal sensitivities. Everyone will find that different levels of brightness will cause them to be alert,
different levels of dimness, if you will, in the room will cause them to feel sleepy. You
really want to just modulate across the 24 hour cycle where it's very bright. As bright
as it safely can be early in the day so that you are alert, you can do your focused, detailed
work in that first phase. And then in the afternoon, as you move into
more creative type works or abstract thinking
or working with other people in kind of a brainstorming mode
that you would shift to dimmer lights, yellow lights,
eliminate the blue lights as much as possible.
Now that's light, but there's another aspect of vision
that has been shown to be critically important
for how alert we are going to be
and how well we
can maintain that alertness.
And that has to do with where our visual focus is in a given environment.
So I'm not talking about overall brightness.
What I'm referring to now is simply where you place your phone or your tablet or computer
screen or book, whatever it is that you happen to be looking at.
There's a very underappreciated and yet incredible aspect of our neurology that
has to do with the relationship between where
we look and our level of alertness.
And it works in a very logical way.
We have clusters of neurons in our brain stem.
And those clusters of neurons control our eyelid muscles,
and they control our eye movements up and down
into the sides.
And indeed, if you were to look at an eyeball, I looked at a lot of eyeballs in my lab and
my teacher in anatomy, so we do this from time to time, we would see that there are six
muscles attached to your eyeball.
Now four of them are located at the top, the bottom, and the two sides of your eyeball.
So we have that they 12 o'clock, six o'clock, three o'clock, and nine o'clock of your eyeball.
And those muscles can move your eye in the socket from side to side and up and down.
And then we also have some muscles that can actually pull the eyeballs at angles, okay?
So there's these, we have different muscles that can move the eyes at different angles as
well.
That's why we can look up into the side or down into the side, not just from side to side
or up or down.
Now, the neurons that control those muscles
have a very interesting feature, which is that
when we are looking down toward the ground
or anywhere below basically the central region of our face,
the neurons that control that eye movement
are intimately related to areas of the brainstem
that release certain types of neuromodulators and neurotransmitters.
And they activate areas of the brain that are associated with calm and indeed even with sleepiness.
And there's an active inhibition or prevention of neurons that increase alertness. Now, the opposite is also true. We have neurons that place
our eyes into an upward gaze above the sort of level of our nose and up above our forehead,
literally looking up while keeping the head stationary. Or if you tilt your head back and you look
up, these neurons are still active. Those neurons don't just control the position of the eyes and
cause them to move up. They also triggered the activation of brain circuits that are associated with alertness.
This is a fundamental feature of the way that our eyes and brain are wired together and
how they relate to what we call autonomic arousal.
There are a bunch of details there.
We will actually have a guest in a few weeks who has learned to exploit these neurons and
the fact that they control these different
states of calm or alertness in order to generate hypnotic states to place people into very
atypical states in which they are both very alert and very calm.
Save that for a future episode.
But the important thing to understand is when you are looking down below the level of your
nose, you are essentially decelerating
your alertness.
You're reducing your amount of alertness.
It might be subtle, but it's happening.
Whereas when you look straight ahead, or in particular when you look up, you're increasing
your level of alertness.
Now, this has some obvious implications when we get sleepy.
Our eyelids tend to close and we tend to nod down.
When we're wide awake, we tend to be wide eyed.
We don't tend to nod down. When we're wide awake, we tend to be wide eyed. We don't
tend to blink as often. And we tend to be chin up and kind of on vigilance and alertness.
So this has a evolutionary or at least an adaptive component to it.
This can be exploited and indeed it's been researched in terms of how it can be used
to optimize work environments. Contrary to what most people do, which is to look
down at their laptop, tablet, or phone, if you want to be alert and you want to maintain
the maximum amount of focus for whatever it is that you're reading or doing, you want that
screen or whatever it is that you're looking at to at least be at eye level and ideally
slightly above it. Now, I haven't seen many work spaces
that take advantage of this very hardwired
neurobiological fact.
So what should you do with this information?
Well, if you're somebody who sits down to do work
and starts to feel sleepy or simply unfocused,
unable to attend to whatever it is that you're doing,
I highly recommend that you take your laptop or tablet.
I do hope that most people aren't doing serious work on their phones because it's such a small
visual window and we can talk about why that's an issue later. And the idea would be to
place that screen of your tablet or your laptop or other computer and try and get it elevated
at least to nose level, your nose level or even higher. Now, I realize that can be complicated
to do.
I've long just used a stack of books,
or I'll sometimes take a box and turn upside down
and set it there.
I do use a mix standing seated desk.
I'll talk about that in a few minutes.
There are a number of different ways that you could do this.
You could wall mount a monitor.
I think many people are working with laptops.
It's a little bit harder to do that with a laptop.
Some people, though, will configure a second screen. You have to decide what's right for you and your budget. But,
again, in addition to having a brightly lit room to be able to focus and attend to whatever
it is you're working on, you want to have that screen position high in your visual environment.
Now, you wouldn't want it on the ceiling necessarily. Oh, that would be pretty cool. But you
do want it above you. Now, there are a couple of solutions to this
that don't involve a wall mount or stacking books or boxes.
For instance, you could be one of those people
that likes to lie in bed or on the sofa
and get your screen up above you by putting pillows on your knees.
I used to actually do a lot of my writing and work
in the middle of the night.
I don't do this anymore and I don't recommend it,
but I used to do a lot of work from bed.
Now I no longer bring electronics for work into the bedroom.
I just really try and keep the bedroom for sleeping
or whatever else.
But in terms of lying down on the couch,
it is somewhat easier to get that screen up above you.
You can kind of slide underneath that screen
and get typing.
But there's a problem with that,
and we'll talk about this a little bit more in a moment,
but it turns out that your posture, literally the position of your body relative to gravity,
also has important implications for how alert you are. So ideally, you would be standing or seated.
I would say the idea would be standing. Second best would be seated. And your screen will be either
directly in front of you or slightly above you, or if you wanted to get really fancy, you could create a situation where it was above you and slightly tilted
toward you so that you actually had to maintain kind of proper neck posture.
This accomplishes a number of things.
In addition to making you more alert, you also get away from the so-called text neck.
People are starting to look more like seas nowadays, the shape of the letter C, because
we're constantly looking down.
I do everyone's in a while, I'll see somebody who's texting in public with it at eye level.
It always looks a little odd that they're doing that, but I always admire their posture
at the same time.
So, we shouldn't give them a hard time.
So this is another feature that you can arrange into your physical workspace.
Again, whether or not you're seated or you're standing throughout the day, trying to get
that screen elevated.
Now, with reference to posture,
there are beautiful data illustrating that
when we are standing up,
those same neurons in our brain stem,
locus seruleus neurons,
which release, I should mention,
things like norapinephrine and epinephrine,
those neurons become active when we are standing.
They become even more active when we are ambulatory,
when we are moving,
and we will talk about tread milling and cycling at your desk and so forth in a little bit.
But when you sit, they become a little less active.
And when you lie down and indeed any time that you start to get your feet up above your
waist or your head tilted back, those neurons fire less and neurons in your brain that are
involved in calming and indeed putting you to sleep start increasing their level of firing.
It's a really beautiful system.
So beautiful in fact that there are studies that show that as you adjust the angle of the
body back, you actually get a sort of dose dependent increase in sleepiness and calmness
and a dose dependent decrease in alertness.
And so as we were all told to sit up straight
or even better to stand up straight,
and now I'm also telling you to get that visual thing
that you're attending to, screen, or otherwise,
up in front of you or ideally above you,
those things combine to generate maximum alertness.
So you can think about how you might work this
into various aspects of your homework environment
or office work environment.
But as I describe this, many of you are probably thinking what I'm thinking, which is gosh,
most of what we do is in complete opposite direction to all of this neurobiologically grounded
advice.
Most of us are looking down at our laptop while seated, or we are lying down, which is
going to make us more sleepy, or we are positioning our computers in front of us, but we really aren't in an
environment that's bright enough and so on and so forth.
So as you can tell, we're starting to layer in the various things that you can do.
First brightness in the room.
Second, get that screen up and try and put yourself into a posture for work that lends itself
or promotes alertness.
If indeed you want to be alert for that work.
If your goal is to take a nap, get your feet elevated about 10 to 15 degrees above your head.
Maybe put a pillow underneath it, lie down and take a nap.
But that's not what we're talking about today.
We're talking about workspace optimization.
And I suppose you could also exploit that all nighter trick
that I talked about earlier.
Actually did this when I was an undergraduate.
I was a little bit massacistic in this way.
I would drink coffee and water at fairly high volume.
I wasn't forced drinking or anything like that.
But I actually wouldn't allow myself to get up
and use the bathroom except on a timer.
So I think the longest I ever went
was three and a half hours.
It was kind of excruciating.
I actually don't think that's necessarily a healthy advice.
But again, you can use slight over consumption of fluids in order to generate
alertness. That was just me really trying to get as much work done as I could. I had a
very, very demanding class schedule. And it was just the only way that I could get work
done. If I was getting up every few minutes to use the restroom, I found it hard to re-engage
in that work and maintain focus, which is what I just want to briefly mention now. I talked
about this in the episode on focus, but one thing that is completely unreasonable
and that you should never ask yourself to do
is to sit down or stand up and immediately focus on something.
Unless you're stressed about what you're looking at
or you're very, very excited by it.
If you're very stressed about some sort of information
or a deadline or you're very, very excited about something,
you'll find that you can focus instantly,
just within a moment.
And that's because of the deployment of neurochemicals
like dopamine and neuroponephrine
that bring about our levels of alertness.
However, most of us, including myself,
will go to begin a work-bout
and we'll find that our mind doesn't quite engage
at the level of depth and focus that we would like
right off the bat.
I've timed this, and other studies have timed this
in a more rigorous way,
mine is just what we call anacidata, but so I've timed it for myself,
but there are studies that have looked at this.
And the data point to the fact that even at our most heightened levels of focus,
most people can only maintain focus before switching tasks for about three minutes,
which is depressingly short period of time.
However, you can extend that period of time, and I've talked about that in the episode on focus,
but more importantly, when you sit down to start a work-bout
of any kind, any kind, expect that it would take
about six minutes for you to engage these neural circuits.
You wouldn't expect yourself to walk into the gym
and do a PR left or start running and do your best sprint
or just head out the door without warming up at all.
You know, a little walk jog at first,
or you know, a few warm-up sets.
I mean, that's, we expect that.
We are not surprised that we need that.
And yet, we sort of expect that our brain
should be able to lock on and do work
in a very focused way immediately.
And that's just a ridiculous assumption.
It's an unfair assumption, I should say.
So, assume that it will take about six minutes
to engage in your work-bout, and that those
neurochemical systems will take some time to rev up and engage.
The other things that I'm describing about lighting and screen positioning and posture,
those will also help maximize your focus and will limit that ramp up time into a focused
state.
I think what you'll find is that as you maximize your workspace, the time, the latency,
as we say, to get into into that focus will start to shorten.
It will especially start to shorten if you use tools to limit distraction.
We will talk about distraction, but things like freedom, which is an app, a free app that
allows you to lock yourself out of the internet or turning off your phone, for instance.
But even if you're doing work on your phone or that involves your phone or the internet as many of us, including myself, do, expect there to be a ramp up time for
you to focus.
There's another aspect of our vision that's absolutely critical for optimizing our workspace.
And that has to do with this really interesting feature of our visual pathways in that it
has two major channels.
Those two major channels have names, although you don't have to remember the names.
The first one is the so-called parvo cellular channel, which is involved in
looking at things at specific points in space and at high resolution or detail. And then
there's the so-called magna-cellar channel that's involved in looking at big swaths of
visual space and at lower resolution. So you can think of the ParvoCellar system as kind of a
high pixel density, think about your most modern smartphone, the recent smartphone
with the best, best camera, and think about the MagnaCellar system as being
lower resolution, kind of an older smartphone, lower pixels, etc. You might ask,
why would you want a system that's low resolution? Well, the low resolution
system is better at things like detecting motion and not so much at detail and vice versa.
Now, again, you don't have to remember the names.
What you do have to remember, however, is that you're going to create the maximum amount
of alertness in your system, the maximum amount of ability to focus when your system is in
that parvocellular mode, when you're bringing your eyes to a common point, what we call
a virgins
eye movement, V-E-R-G-E-N-C-E. I've said this before in the podcast and people said
virgin eye movement. No, virgins eye movement as in convergence, bringing your eyes to a single
point in space will create a narrower aperture of a visual window, meaning your visual world
actually shrinks at least perceptually, whereas when you relax your eyes
and dilate your gaze, you can do this now by whatever environment you're in, trying to
see without moving your head off to the side above, below you as broadly as possible.
Maybe you can dilate your gaze so much you can see yourself, your body in that visual
environment.
You'll notice that your resolution of vision isn't nearly as high as when you do that
virgin side movement.
Virginside movements are incredibly powerful for creating heightened states of alertness
and focus.
And indeed, they create heightened states of cognition, of thinking.
And that's because your brain follows your vision in terms of focus.
When we say, I can't focus what we often are experiencing is an ability and inability,
excuse me, to not focus visually.
Whereas when we are in a very focused state,
we are in a state often where we can focus visually.
Now we can also do this with our auditory system
or to touch, et cetera, but right now
we're just talking about the visual system.
Now in terms of workspace optimization,
what this means is we never really want to be looking
at a square or rectangle or target area for our work
that is too far beyond
our ears.
How far is too far?
Really you want to try and keep the blinders on or I should say the invisible blinders
so that whatever you're looking at falls within the region of visual space in front of you
that is present if you were to cup your hands and put them right next to your eyes.
Now this is a rough estimation but I'm doing this now for those of you there watching
on YouTube, I'm doing this now,
I'm trying to simulate it like a horse with blinders on.
For those of you that are listening,
just imagine me looking silly
with my hands cupped near my eyes.
But if we are to, for instance,
look at a screen that's very, very big
and we're too close to it,
or even if we're standing back from it,
it's going to be hard for us to attend
to everything within that screen space.
So this is actually support for the idea of using a phone or a tablet or a laptop.
My laptop is about 15 inches in diameter, I think, is the one that I have.
Some are 13, some are 17.
Some of you like to use big monitors.
Make sure that whatever it is that you're looking at, if you want to remain focused, it doesn't
extend too far beyond where your eyes are, the sides of your head that is.
So just think blinders on a horse.
And actually that's the reason they put blinders on a horse so that they're not looking
off into the periphery.
Horses, unlike humans, don't have the same shaped pupil, they don't have a visual system
that's organizing quite the same way.
They mostly see in panorama in Magno-Cellar vision.
And so those blinders are designed
to keep their visual focus straight ahead.
So they physically restrict it.
Now, some people will actually go to lengths
to further restrict their visual focus.
They will do things like putting on a hoodie
or wearing a hat, for instance, to restrict their visual window.
And indeed, that works quite well.
But as we'll talk about in a moment, when you really restrict their visual window. And indeed, that works quite well, but as we'll talk about in a moment,
when you really restrict your visual window
down to a very, very narrow portion of visual space,
that actually changes the types of information
that you're best at processing.
And we'll talk about that in terms of something
that's called the cathedral effect in a few moments.
But for now, here's the principle.
Make sure that whatever you're looking at
is directly in front of you and doesn't extend too far out to the side. Once you get out
to, say, six or 12 or certainly 18 inches on either side of your eyes, you are dilating
your gaze. By definition, you're dilating your gaze. It's completely subconscious. And
it becomes very hard to maintain attention. Now, the caveat to this is that if you are
going to look at a narrow
space, a narrow window for any period of time, whether or not it's a book or a laptop or a tablet or
a phone, those virgins eye movements not only create alertness, but they also require energy
and they also can fatigue the eyes because there's a process called accommodation whereby the shape
of your eye literally has to change so that the lens can move so that you can focus at that location.
Accommodation is an incredible process, but it is a demanding one, and that's the reason
that your eyes get tired when you focus on something for too long.
So here's a principle extracted from the Ophthalmology and Neuroscience literature that you can
adopt.
For every 45 minutes in which you are focusing on something like a phone or a tablet or a book
page or your computer, you want to get into Magna Seller panoramic vision for at least
five minutes.
And the way that I suggest to do this is actually to take a walk ideally outside.
We're going to talk about ambulation, about movement, and about how that can maintain
alertness throughout the day.
So for every 45 minutes or so, try and get five minutes of relaxing your eyes.
This is something that's not often done, especially in today's homeschooling and where
people are, where kids are going to school by Zoom and adults are working by Zoom.
This is a serious problem.
People are getting eye fatigue, they're getting headaches, indeed some people are getting
migraines, they're having all sorts of issues. Neck pain, much of that.
If not, all of that in some cases can be alleviated by this 45 to 5 rule.
For every 45 minutes of focused work that you do, get 5 minutes where you get outside
or if you have to be indoors where you can dilate your gaze.
Now some of you may be saying, well, that spits in the face of your 90 minute rule.
You're trying to, you've told us before that we should focus for 90 minutes.
I would still want you to take breaks within those 90 minutes if you're looking at a narrow
piece of visual world, meaning at a phone or a laptop or so forth.
And again, the best way to do this would be to go outside, just relax your eyes, look
off into the distance, looking at a horizon will automatically trigger this panoramic gaze, which is very
relaxing to the eyes, and will allow you to go back into a focused work-about.
The one thing you absolutely do not want to do is to go outside and check your phone.
Because if you're outside checking your phone or you're taking a break and checking
your phone, you're still in that virgin's eye movement, okay?
So this is very, very important because Virgin's eye movements increase focus and attention
and you can exploit that to increase focus and attention
when you want to, but you absolutely need to relax the system.
Again, for every 45 minutes in which you've been in that focused mode,
you want to get at least five minutes of panoramic vision.
If you can take a 15-minute walk, even better.
Next, I'd like to talk about an aspect of workspace optimization that can actually bias
whether or not our brain and nervous system are better suited for detailed analytic work
or more abstract work.
In fact, there's a way that you can arrange your work environment or, I should say, there's
a way that you can place yourself into certain environments that will
allow abstract thinking, creative thinking, and indeed expansive thinking to emerge.
There are other environments that you can put yourself in that will make your brain shift
towards more analytic work, toward more detailed and precise types of work.
I just briefly want to mention something that was covered again on the Habits episode
that I did a few weeks ago, but again, you don't need to see that episode in order to digest
this information.
It goes back to this issue of three phases within the circadian 24 hour cycle.
Phase one, which as I mentioned, is about zero to eight hours after waking.
Phase two, nine to sixteen hours after waking.
And phase three, seventeen to twenty four hours after waking in phase three, 17 to 24 hours after waking, phase one being ideal
for analytic, precise, detailed types of work.
Phase two, better suited for most people for creative kind of abstract thinking, expansive
thinking, brainstorming, et cetera.
There are some exceptions to that, but most people follow that pattern because of the
different neuromodulators and hormones
and so forth that are released into the brain and body at those different phases.
What I'm about to tell you is a way in which you can use your physical environment to further
shift your brain and nervous system into a mode that's either primed for analytic or
abstract and creative thinking.
What I'm about to describe is called the cathedral effect.
The cathedral effect has been discussed, well really for many, many decades, maybe even hundreds
of years, but formally has been discussed since the early 2000s in which it seemed that
people who were in high-ceiling environments, hence the phrase cathedral, would shift their thinking and their ideas
to more abstract and creative lofty type thinking.
So literally higher ceiling, loftier thinking, higher aspirations, that this was observed
in terms of the language that they used, but also the sorts of ideas that they would
generate.
And conversely, that people that were in lower-ceiling environments would be more oriented toward using language that was more restricted, literally more detailed, analytic about things in their immediate space.
Now, this seems kind of wild on the one hand, but actually, if we go back to our understanding of the neurobiology, the visual system, and the way that our brains and bodies
evolved in different environments,
it actually makes a lot of sense.
We don't have time to go into a long lecture
about evolutionary neurobiology,
but we have to remember that our nervous system
has a number of features that are adapted
to different environments.
And indeed, we are able to go from big open prairies
or mountaintops or large cathedrals or concert halls into small
environments and everything scales with it.
When we're outdoors in a big expansive space, our vision tends to go long.
We tend to be in panoramic, magno-seller vision.
Our hearing tends to extend long.
Even if we're having a conversation with somebody, we tend to also be attending somewhat
to the screech of hocks off in the distance or to the rush of a river.
Whereas when we're in small spaces, everything, our vision, our hearing, and indeed even
our physical movements become more restrained.
Even if we can still extend our hands out as far as we want.
What do I mean by that?
Let's say you're in an elevator.
That's a small space compared to outside on a field.
This has been measured over and over again.
People's size or the amplitude of people's
spontaneous movements actually scales down
in small or environments,
even if they aren't completely restricted
from extending their limbs all the way.
Whereas when we are outdoors, we feel a natural impulse
to move further away from our body, our torso with our limbs.
This just feels like more appropriate behavior.
And when I say appropriate, I don't mean in any kind of social context necessarily.
There's actually a reason for this.
The visual system and the so-called vestibular motor system are intimately linked.
And I can just tell you briefly one way in which you can test this and observe this and
even use this.
It's a little off topic from today's episode.
But let's say you have a certain amount of flexibility.
You can extend your arms off like wings is what I'm doing for those either listening, not
watching off to your sides with arms straight.
And you reach a maximum positioning of flexibility.
You can do a quick experiment where you sit still.
You would bring your arms in for a moment.
You could put them on your knees if you like or in front of you.
And you can move your eyes very far off into the periphery of your visual
field. So you actually, I'm going to do this now.
It looks kind of silly, but moving my eyes without moving my head off into the periphery,
all the way to the right, then all the way to the left, all the way up,
all the way down, but especially all the way to the left,
almost looking over my shoulder without turning my head all the way to the left, all the way up, all the way down, but especially all the way to the left, almost looking over my shoulder without turning my head, all the way to my right.
And you will find that you actually can extend your arms further back, subsequent to that.
And that's not magic.
What it has to do with the ways in which your cerebellum, which actually means mini brain
and your eyes, your visual system are connected, and the way in which your cerebellum controls
some of the spindles and other aspects of the neuromuscular architecture of your nervous
system, because your nerves control your muscles, and allow those muscles to move further
out.
So for those of you that lack flexibility, you can actually exploit your visual system for
this.
Now, that's again, a bit of a tangent, but it's a fun one that relates back to this so-called
cathedral effect.
The cathedral effect is a way in which our thinking becomes more restricted
and restrained in tighter, smaller, more confined visual environments. Or if the ceiling is higher,
we are in expansive space with a lot of distance above us or space above us and out to the sides,
maybe even out on a field, our thinking goes into these more broad abstract
and loftier future thinking in particular.
This has actually been measured.
There's a really nice paper.
I will post a link to this.
The authors are Joan Myers-Levy and Rui
and then parentheses, Juliet Zoo.
I'm gonna assume that they go by Juliet.
The title of the paper is the influence of sealing height,
the effect of priming on the type of processing that people use.
And I won't go into all the details of this paper, but what's really cool about this paper is they looked with very rigorous statistics and they have a fair number of subjects and everything about this paper looks all it to me at the difference in cognitive processing
an abstract thinking and detailed analytic work that people are able to perform in environments that have a 10 foot ceiling versus an 8 foot ceiling, which is not that much of a difference.
There's just two foot difference there.
What they found were significant effects whereby high ceilings activate concepts related to
abstraction, whereas low ceilings prime confinement related concepts, but are promote
the kind of detailed thinking that that lends itself well to sort of spreadsheet type
work or accounting type work, whereas abstract creative work was supported by these higher
ceilings.
And the way they analyze this was really interesting.
Again, we don't have time to go into all the details, but they ask people to sort of generate
word sets of related to particular topics,
like sports, and so people will talk about soccer, football, baseball, golf, etc., and talk
about some of the equipment and other things.
And then they had a kind of a challenge, a cognitive challenge whereby people had to link
different concepts along different dimensions, so that you depart from the dimension of
sport and you start thinking about sports that involve teams or sports that involve a ball, etc.
And so in the same conditions, you can accept for the fact that the ceiling height is different,
eight feet or ten feet.
What one finds is that the kinds of language and the kinds of associations that people
start to create are vastly different.
And they're actually two experiments in this study.
You're welcome to go look at it.
So it wasn't just about sports.
There were some other things that were analyzed as well.
And in the references of this paper,
it also points to other examples now of the cathedral effect,
which I find very interesting because as a vision scientist
and someone who spends his life thinking about
and indeed talking about the nervous system,
we know that our cognition follows our vision.
For low vision or blind people, we'll follow their, mostly their hearing and to some extent
their touch.
But for most people who are cited, most people are cited, our cognition follows our visual
environment.
So what does this mean for workspace optimization?
Well, most of us have a fixed ceiling level in our, in our home, but you might have rooms
in which the ceiling is higher and rooms in which the ceiling is higher and
rooms in which the ceiling is lower.
If that were the case, I recommend if you want to do creative work during phase two, the
nine to 16 hours of your circadian cycle, nine to 16 hours after waking, that is that you
do that in the high ceiling room, or maybe even outdoors out on a deck or on a patio,
because the highest ceiling, of course, is the sky.
Whereas if you're going to do detailed analytic work,
I would suggest doing that during phase one of the day,
but even if you're going to do it during phase two of the day,
for whatever reason, scheduling
or other sorts of constraints,
that you do that in the lower ceiling environment.
Now, if you are interested in controlling
the height of your visual world,
but you don't have control over the ceiling height
of the environment that you're in,
there's another way to do that. And I used to observe this in the cafes and around
Stanford in the Bay Area where you would see somebody who, despite the weather, would
be in a hoodie, maybe with a baseball cap or other form of hat, or some sort of blinder
above their eyebrows, which is actually another way of just lowering the ceiling height
very, very low and restricting your visual field.
Not unlike blinders that we talked about before that one would put on a horse or one would
put on them themselves by restricting their visual angle of focus to directly in front of
them, but not too far out beyond the sides of their head.
So these cathedral effects, I think, can be leveraged toward doing particular types of work
best.
And again, the lower the ceiling or the lower your visual environment, the more
that one tends to do, I should say, performs detailed analytic work accurately. And the
more that one's thinking is oriented towards detailed, sort of correct answer type work.
Whereas when the ceiling is higher or there's no ceiling, the more that the brain and the
rest of the processing
that we call cognitive processing
is related to abstract reasoning, brainstorming,
and indeed can pull from broader swaths
of memory resources, because really what abstract reasoning is,
is it's taking existing elements
and maneuvering them or arranging them into novel ways.
So you could think about like notes on a piano,
playing a particular song, learning scales.
That's very analytic.
There's a correct answer that you're trying to arrive at
or generate.
Whereas writing music or writing poetry
or generating new material of any kind
involves taking existing elements, right?
You're not gonna use words that you don't have
committed to your memory that you're not aware of
and arranging them in novel ways.
So I think the cathedral fact can be leveraged,
and again, you don't need to move into a different home
or build a slanted roof and work at one side of the room
at one part of the day and the other side of the room
at the other, although, hey, if that's the way you want
to swing it, that's great.
Most of us don't have that flexibility,
but it's very clear that the height of the ceiling
of the visual environment that we're in has a profound effect on the types of cognitive
processes that we are able to engage. Now I'd like to shift our attention to the
auditory environment or the noise in the room or the music in the room or the
music or noise in the headphones because it turns out that there is a lot of
quality scientific data out there that speaks to whether or not listening to particular sounds
can enhance our cognition.
And indeed, the answer is yes,
but there are very particular types of things
to listen to under very particular types of conditions
that allow one to do that.
First off, I wanna say that people very tremendously
the extent to which they can tolerate background noise for
work. In fact, individuals will vary tremendously from one day to the next or even within the
same day, the extent to which they can tolerate background noise. I've experienced this myself.
There have been times in which I've been working at home and I felt like for whatever reason
I just could not engage in focus and what worked to generate more focus for me
was to go to a cafe or to a library or someplace where there's actually more commotion,
more people moving about, maybe even more noise, maybe even music in the room.
And we have to all be in touch with when we want more background noise or when we want less background noise.
There is no hard and fast rule.
If you look across the literature for
studies that involve complete silence or white noise or binaural beats or music or classical
music or rock and roll, you can find results to support any type of environment as being
more beneficial. However, as we'll talk about in a moment, there are a few types of environments
to really avoid and a few types of sounds that really can enhance the cognition and your ability to focus
in your workspace environment across the board that really seem to work for all people.
Let's talk about background noise to avoid. And here we're talking about background noise to
avoid because it actually can cause some pretty severe deficits in cognition. There's a paper
first author, Jordan Love, cool name, last author, Alexander Francis.
The title of the paper has to do with psychophysiological responses to potentially annoying heating
ventilation and air conditioning noise during mentally demanding work, which is a mouthful.
But basically, what this paper identifies is a large data set in which workplace and environmental noise,
mostly the humming of air conditioners
that's very loud or the humming of heaters
that's very loud and ongoing, just incessant,
doesn't let up, can really increase mental fatigue
and can vastly decrease cognitive performance.
And if you're interested in looking at the cognitive
performance data that authors are Bambury and Barry 2005. That paper is the one that supports
the fact that cognitive performance is worse when there's just the hum of an air conditioner
in the background or the hum of a heater and otherwise complete silence. There's also evidence,
which I discussed on the episode about hearing, which is that in young children, white noise
can cause some impairments in the development of the auditory system.
Now, I don't want parents to freak out, and if you're exposed to white noise as a sleep
aid, as a child, which I know many of you were, don't freak out, but it turns out that white
noise, especially if it's loud white noise, can cause some disruption in the auditory
maps, the representation of different frequencies of sound in the brain that can lead to some deficits
in auditory and even language processing. So we really have to be careful about long-term exposure,
extended exposure to white noise or kind of air conditioning noise that's really at a high level.
I wouldn't worry if it's in the background and it's shutting off and turning on again as the
thermostat kicks off and on. But really trying to avoid work in loud, fan-filled,
or ventilation generating, or heat generating environments,
because it really can cause damage
to the auditory system long-term.
And as we described, it can impair cognitive performance
and overall increase fatigue.
I think we've all experienced that.
When you're in a room and there's some ongoing background noise
in all of a sudden, it stops,
and you just feel this enormous relief.
And the reason for this is that our auditory system
has a parallel to our visual system.
In our visual system, that light entering the eyes
triggers the activation of those melanops and cells
which triggers activation of the hypothalamus,
a particular area of the hypothalamus,
which generates alertness,
generates the release even of cortisol,
a stress hormone. In the auditory system, when there's ongoing sound, your auditory system hears
that even if you're not paying attention to it, if you're paying attention to something else,
it still registers those little hair cells as they're called in your inner ear, are fluttering
that your drum is beating and in concert to that sound frequency. And there's a brainstem mechanism that generates alertness
and a kind of vigilance.
So when you have a sound that's ongoing in the background,
it shuts off, I'll send you experience that piece,
which is the turning off of those brainstem circuits
that are associated with vigilance.
The locus serulias, which we talked about earlier,
which release epinephrine and nor epinephrine
and generate that heightened state of alertness
in your brain and body, those neurons then can turn off and you experience that as relaxation.
So does that mean that we shouldn't listen to white noise or pink noise or brown noise while we're working?
Certainly a lot of people do. In fact, if you want to know what white noise, pink noise, and brown noise are, they're just different
constellations of
auditory frequencies that are played together. Most of us think of white noise as that shsh on a screen
You know all the black and and white pixels going all around like they call it visual snow
but pink noise has certain sound
frequencies
Notched out taken out brown noise has others. It has different frequencies that are that are included at higher amplitude
Etc. You can look this stuff up on YouTube if you want.
You just put brown noise.
None of it sounds terrific.
It doesn't sound like music.
It's literally just noise mixed frequencies
in no particular arrangement.
There is some evidence that playing white noise
in the background or on headphones or pink noise
or brown noise can facilitate cognition.
But it's mainly through an increase in this overall alertness.
As a consequence of areas like locustsarulius
and other brain tumor areas that are associated
with autonomic arousal from that noise.
So it's a lot like the air conditioner effect.
And I think done in a restricted way,
meaning not for hours and hours,
but maybe if your focus is waning
and you're having a hard time engaging in work,
you might put on some brown noise or white noise
or pink noise and work that way for 45
minutes or so before you go to your panoramic vision walk and get some sunlight.
That should be fine.
There's really no reason to suspect, however, that those particular patterns of noise
are going to optimize particular mental functions.
So what I'd like to turn to next are particular patterns of sounds that indeed have been shown in peer-reviewed studies to optimize certain types of mental processing.
Because you can incorporate these into your optimized workspace environment through headphones
or through speakers, whatever mechanism that you want in order to get more out of your
work efforts.
If you were to search for apps or go online and try and find sounds that can improve thinking or
change your emotions.
You're generally going to find three types.
One are called isocronic tones.
These are tones usually of a common frequency.
So it might be a beep and then a pause and then a beep of the same frequency and then
beep.
Forgive my terrible beeping.
I don't know what good beeping would sound like,
but contrast isoconic tones with monorble beats.
Monorble beats would be repetitive,
almost percussive like beats delivered to just one ear.
Tune, tune, tune, tune, tune, tune, tune, tune,
tune, tune, tune, tune, tune, tune, tune, tune,
this kind of thing.
Okay, you can find apps that can deliver monorble beats.
You can find also apps that deliver so-called
binarble beats. You can also find YouTube scripts that or channels that will
deliver binaril beats. Bineril beats, as the name suggests, are beats delivered
to the two ears. One pattern of kind of percussive beat to one ear and a
different pattern, or at least a pattern that's out of phase that's not
synchronized, delivered to the other ear. So on one ear you hear, and then the other ear,
you've got, and what happens is because of the way
that the auditory system converges in the brainstem
and generates what are called intraoral time differences.
I'll explain what that means in a moment.
Intraoral time differences.
The difference between the two patterns of beats
that are heard by each of the two different ears
leads to a third pattern that the brain entrains to and kind of maps onto and generates particular types of brain waves
Okay, so without going into a lot of detail
Entrall time differences are the ways in which if you were to hear something off to your right like I just snapped my finger just to the right of my right ear,
that a signal arrives in my right ear before that sound signal, those soundways arrive in my left ear.
So there's an intra-oral between ears time difference. And there's a brainstem area in which signals from one ear and
signals from the other ear converge, and there's literally a math done by your
nervous system that says this signal arrived before the other signal.
And the difference between those signals is the interoral time difference.
So if I were to snap my fingers on both sides, on my left end, on my right side at the
exact same time, and they arrive at the same time, the interal time difference is zero.
Whereas if one goes first on the right and then the left, I'm terrible at snapping on the left, it's a weak snap, but it was there.
Then there's a delay in the interval time difference has a particular value.
Okay, you get it.
It's almost ridiculously simple.
Bynural beats have been generated in ways that create a particular pattern of interval
time differences that then cascades up to the rest of the brain and puts
the four brain and other areas of the brain that are involved in cognition and action into
a particular rhythm.
And some of the rhythms or waves of brain activity are ones that you may have heard
of, things like alpha waves or theta waves or gamma waves.
Now I don't like to get to attach to particular brain waves as excellent for particular kinds of thinking.
This is something that was really popular in the 90s and 2000s when ways of measuring
brain activity non-invasively with electrodes on the outside enabled people to identify.
The indeed alpha brain waves are associated with alertness states and some are other brain
waves that are kind of larger amplitude slow, waves like delta waves are associated
with kind of sleepiness or relaxation. But in general, the way that the brain works is that
different brain waves are generated in different structures at different times and those combine
to give us a sense of happiness or give us a sense of focus or give us a sense of creativity.
Nonetheless, if you look across the board at the studies of BINORAL BEATS and you ask,
what sorts of BINORAL BEATS appear to be useful for people to enhance their brain function
for particular times of task, we arrive at some very interesting answers.
So we'll review what those are now.
The frequency of BINORAL BEATS that appears to bring about improved cognitive functioning
at the level of memory, improved reaction times, and improved verbal recall.
Seems to be 40 hertz.
Now is it exactly 40 hertz?
We don't know.
But if one wants to look up a great reference on this, the reference call Zato, C-O-L-Z-A-T-O, at all
2017, describes and here I'm quoting, so this is a direct quote. The present findings are
in line with those of a recent study, which also found faster reaction times and participants
that listen to binaural beats of 40 hertz. And you can find many examples of this in
the literature, where binaural beats of about 40 hertz, or exactly 40 hertz in some cases,
somehow brought the brain into a state
that made it optimal for learning, for memory,
and for certain types of recall,
including verbal recall, math learning, et cetera.
So for those of you that are interested in binomial beats,
there are a number of free apps out there.
I'm not gonna recommend any in particular,
just have to search for one that you happen to like.
One thing that you happen to like.
One thing that you will find is that many of those apps superimpose binoarol beats onto raindrops or ocean sounds, or rather they superimpose ocean sounds and raindrops onto the binoarol beats.
That does not appear to be as effective as pure binoarol beats.
There has been an exploration of lower frequency binaural beats.
So for instance, seven hertz, which is theta binaural beats done for 30 minutes,
with an overlay of rain sound or rain sounds only, that's been analyzed. And believe it or not,
that showed immediate recall memory was significantly decreased. So that's a negative effective
binaural beats on memory. So the idea that barital beats are just great for us across the board, I think, is wrong.
It does appear that the higher frequency binarital beats, as one moves up toward 40 hertz,
are going to be the most beneficial.
There are instances in which, for instance, 15 hertz binarital beats increase response
accuracy on a spatial verbal memory task.
This is a complicated working memory task.
Working memory is the kind of memory
of remembering a phone number.
So if I say, for instance, 4932931, and you have to remember
that number, keeping it online is what we call your working
memory.
It's likely that you would forget that two or three days
later.
You can get improvements in working memory
with 15 Hertz binomial beats.
Whereas the other control conditions, 5 Hertz and 10 Hertz binomial beats all decreased
accuracy of working memory.
However, when I look at the literature and I examine a number of different studies, what
I always seem to come back to was that 40 Hertz or so plus or or minus five hertz, seem to be optimal for generating improvements
in cognition, in math performance, and even in various types of memory recall and even
in musical performance.
You might wonder, well, how can people do musical performance that are listening to
binaural beats?
Here's another surprise.
Many of the studies that I looked at didn't have people listening to binaural beats while
they were doing the tasks, the memory task, or the music learning, etc.
They would do it beforehand for 30 minutes.
There were instances in which people were listening to Binaural Beats during the task,
but if you decide to employ Binaural Beats, I recommend this 40 Hertz as a great place
to start.
I don't recommend doing it for all of your workouts.
I think there's a good reason to believe that you can attenuate to it. But if you are going to try it, you might try it both ways.
You might try listening to Binary Orbeats for about 30 minutes while doing something else,
and then maybe eating lunch or something in that sort or taking a walk, and then going
into the workout.
Because remember, the moment that you start listening to these Binary Orbeats, the brain
doesn't immediately switch into a particular pattern of oscillation or brain waves.
It takes some time.
Neural circuits, again, take time to engage.
The only neural circuits that are going to engage instantly are going to be the ones that
are of a sort of reflexive sort.
Like you step on a sharp object and you have to retract your limb or you suddenly are
stressed by a distressing text message or you're suddenly delighted about a delightful
text message.
But when it comes to shifting your whole brain state toward optimizing work, it takes a little
bit of time.
So again, 40 Hertz, binomial beats, many, many apps, many YouTube scripts out there, probably
other resources for binomial beats.
Hopefully zero costs.
You can access those without any need to shell out any money.
If you find one that you particularly like, maybe put in the comment section so other
people can find it, a YouTube would be the best place to do that.
Feel free to put a link or just a description.
That will be wonderful.
And again, you don't need to listen to the Binaural Beats at the exact same time that you're
doing the work, although that could also enhance your productivity.
Some of you out there might be craving a little bit more mechanism by which Binaural Beats
can influence things like focus or reduced reaction time.
This has actually been explored.
This 40 hertz binaural beats pattern seems to have an effect on what's called stridled
dopamine.
Dopamine is a neuromodulator, of course, involved in many things in motivation.
It's actually involved in adaptation to light in the retina, something that most people
don't know.
But it's involved in movement, which is why people with Parkinson's who have a depletion
of dopamine neurons, actually have movement deficits and so on.
But stridled dopamine is closely related to motivation and focus.
And 40 hertz binomial beats appears to increase stridled dopamine release.
And this has actually been measured indirectly by what we call spontaneous blink rate. I've been accused of various Instagram posts and even on this podcast of being a
non-blinker, let's call it, or a minimal blinker. And as an important aside,
there is no evidence whatsoever that people that don't blink very much are sociopaths or lie.
Also, you will hear that people who blink a lot are sociopaths and are
lying. There is absolutely no evidence that blink frequency correlates with anything except alertness.
Now longer blinks are associated with less alertness. As we get tired, we tend to blink longer and
longer until we take the long blink that is sleep. I guess the long blink would be death, but the long
sleep. I guess the long blink would be death, but the long-ish blink would be sleep. But it turns out that the more firing of straddle dopamine neurons that's occurring, the more
frequently we blink. And so it is associated with a resetting of our visual window. That's
what happens when we blink. And there's a whole relationship between blinking and time
perception that we covered in the episode on time perception. But here's the bottom line for sake of this discussion.
Forty hertz binomial beats appears to increase spontaneous blink rates because it increases
dopamine transmission in the brainstem and in the striatum in several locations in fact.
And so the way in which these binomial beats set a rhythm in the brain recruits dopamine
release.
That dopamine release leads to heightened levels of motivation and focus.
Why motivation and focus?
Well, dopamine is actually the substrate by which epinephrine is made.
Dopamine, the molecule, is actually converted into epinephrine adrenaline.
And they work together like close cousins, dopamine and epinephrine in order to put us
on a path of movement, or if we are doing work of mental movement toward a goal.
So, that's a little bit of mechanistic meat to explain at least part of the reason why 40 hertz
binomial beats can enhance our focus, reduce our reaction times, and improve, indeed, learning and memory.
Next, I'd like to talk about the role of movement in optimizing our workspace,
and whether or not standing, sitting, lying down, treadmilling, or even believe it
or not, cycling can enhance our work output and performance.
Before we do that, I want to touch on two aspects of optimizing workspace that will come up
at some point in your work or school life.
Alas, there isn't a lot of science around this, but I think they are worth mentioning, and
I think I can offer a little bit of advice in terms of how to navigate these in a way that would be beneficial to you.
The first one is interruptions. If you go online and you ask about how to avoid interruptions,
people will say, okay, well, if you have kids at home or even if you don't or at work,
you have a light like a recording like recording is on, we're busy now or have a sign on the door
that says, bother only in the case of emergency,
or fine to knock, or don't knock at all.
I've used a different policy throughout the years.
I am somebody who works pretty hard
to control my time and focus,
but of course, as a laboratory director,
I have people coming by and who wanna talk about things.
And of course, we have phones and we have computers
and people's opportunity to reach us.
Interruptions really are deadly to our ability
to generate focus.
And it's not just about the distraction
that occurs of, say, a minute or two minutes
or five minutes when we were interrupted.
It's also about the additional time
to get those brain circuits re-engaged
to a mode of focus.
So it's really kind of a double whammy.
Now, none of us, including myself, want to be harsh or cruel or shut off from the world.
And oftentimes, interruptions bring incredible insights. And people are providing support
and very useful things that are essential to my work day and presumably to your work day
and school day as well. But there's a simple method that I learned from my graduate advisor
that works very, very well.
Again, no peer-reviewed data support it. This is just my experience.
But this is somebody who had immense powers of focus, had a very, very demanding life,
a long commute to children, extensive laboratory, et cetera.
And what she would do was, if I came by and asked a question,
or if anyone came by and asked a question,
she would acknowledge their presence, but would not shift her body toward them. So she purposely did not position her
computer facing the door, which I think is a deadly, or I should say deadly to focus a way of
positioning your workspace. So her computer was facing the wall, the door was perpendicular to that.
I know a combine, I say, I have a question, and she would say, yes, so she would acknowledge
my presence, but she wouldn't actually orient her body toward me, which told me that this
conversation was not going to last very long. And no matter how long I stood there, what
I asked, she would never orient toward me, which generally kept these conversations very,
very short. We had other designated meetings where we would be face to face. The other
approach, which I confess colleagues of mine have used before, not necessarily at Stanford, but elsewhere,
is to simply say no to everything
that somebody requests or comes by.
So if someone would knock on the door,
they would just shout no through the door,
or if someone would say, can I bother you for a second?
They would say no, or if someone would say,
I have something I want to tell you,
they would just say no,
and they would just continue doing this
until the person went away.
That was actually very effective.
These were some of the most productive people I know, not always the kindest people, but
some of them were very kind.
The other approach that I've seen and actually this is an approach that was used by someone
who's been a guest on the Hubertman Lab podcast, someone who's immensely productive, was
that he, so I'm constraining who this might be by saying he, he actually, despite having
the option to have a very large office, would place himself in a workspace that was literally
a coat closet, cleared out with a desk, small lamp completely dark.
So this violates everything that I've talked about before or prior to this, everything
about high ceilings, bright light, et cetera,
and would work, still works, underneath a desk lamp
in a completely dark closet, minimal ventilation.
This is my definition of hell,
and yet is one of the most productive people on the planet,
also very, very hard to find.
I actually know where his closet is,
it turns out he has several of them
that he migrates from in order to avoid distractions.
So I mentioned these as kind of extremes, I think that most of us exist on the other extreme
and that's why I mention it, which is that most of us like some social engagement and
a welcome or at least set our work environment in a way that welcomes interruption.
We have to be very, very careful about this.
Now in the digital realm, I already mentioned a few of the things that we can do as practical tools to limit interruptions. One is to use the program freedom. The other
would be to simply turn off the Wi-Fi. If you do need to be online and navigating, you're
doing research of any kind, that's not going to be possible. Turning off one's phone,
I've at times put my phone on airplane mode. If that didn't work, I've locked it in a safe.
I've done that. I've left it in the car outside.
It all depends on one's levels of self-discipline,
which, as you probably know from your own experience,
tends to wax and wane.
Sometimes we are better at avoiding these distractions
than others.
So if you find yourself in a place where it's very hard
to reduce those distractions, you may need to go
to more elaborate lengths.
I will say that a graduate student in my lab
who was immensely productive and focused
had the habit of coming in each day, she would take her phone.
I don't know if she turned it on off or not, and she would just place it in the door,
excuse me, in a drawer.
And would then go, start doing experiments.
We do experiments all day at 10 courses, engage in discussions, avidly with the rest of us,
and then would take her phone out at the end of the day and leave.
And I don't think that behavior
was not correlated with her immense productivity.
I think the ability to untether ourselves from the phone
is going to be the way in which many of us
are either going to succeed or fail
in our various pursuits.
I'm somebody who engages with the phone
on a regular basis throughout the day for various reasons, but I do try and have large swaths of the day in which it's
either on airplane mode or it's completely physically separated from me. When I mean
large swaths, I might do every other hour with the phone on airplane mode or even a two or
three hour about where I just am simply not engaged with the phone at all. So is it better
to sit or is it better to stand when doing work?
At least as it relates to focus and productivity and the answer is both. There have been a number
of systematic studies exploring what are called sit stand desks. So these are desks that can be set
to height that makes standing the best practice and then they can be lowered to a height that makes sitting the best practice or the easiest practice I should say.
And it turns out that just sitting is terrible for us.
And there's an enormous number of studies out there that point to the fact that people who sit for five or six or seven hours a day doing work
have all sorts of issues related to sleep, neck pain, cognition
suffers, their number of cardiovascular effects, even digestion.
There may even actually be some almost pressure effects on the pelvic floor and things of that
sort depending on the chairs that one uses, but that people who stand are in a slightly
better situation where many of those health metrics improve, but that people that do a combination
of sitting and standing at the same desk throughout the day or move from one desk to another
if they don't have a combination stand desk, that's going to be best.
The good news is it's very easy to convert a desk into a stand desk.
You can just stack some boxes.
I've done this at times or stack books.
There are also some pedestals and things that you can purchase if that's your preference
in order to set your computer at a particular height.
And of course, there are desks that have motors and there ones that have cranks and there
are all sorts of variations, both in terms of the types and whether or not they have motors,
as well as the cost to these things.
So they can go from very low cost, like placing boxes or books to create a standing desk
to very high cost in some cases.
Now what's interesting, if you look at the scientific literature, is that people who
decreased their sitting time by about half each day.
So they took, let's say they were working for seven hours a day, three and a half hours
of that day, they decided to stand.
And it's not even clear that it matters that they do all those three hours in one bowed
or they divide that up into shorter bouts of a half an hour and then sit for half an
hour, etc.
Alternating back and forth showed incredibly significant effects on reduced neck and shoulder
pain, increase in subjective health, vitality and work related environments, and perhaps most
importantly for sake of today's discussion, improvement in cognitive conditioning and the ability to
embrace new tasks and cognitive performance.
There are several studies that if one wanted to explore, they could explore this in more
detail.
I'll put a link to this as well.
The article that I'm referring to is called Effect of Workplace Sit Stand Desk Intervention
on Health and Productivity.
I like this paper because many of the papers out there focus on the effects of sit-stand
desks on health and trying to get people to burn more calories, improve their posture,
relieve neck pain, slumped over, etc.
But not on productivity.
And this particular paper focuses also on the metrics of productivity.
It has its own study and also references the number of important studies.
What does this mean for you and me?
Well, I've long used a standing desk or some variation thereof.
What this means is that we should probably spend about half of our work time standing
and about half of it sitting, but not all sitting or not all standing.
If you had to do all one or the other, standing is going to be better than sitting.
What happens if we just stand?
Well, that can also generate some postural issues
in terms of stabilization and fatigue. I have a good friend who's in the movement and
physical rehabilitation and physiology space. His name is Kelly Starrett. He's very impressive
in all those domains. He always says, we weren't designed to sit all day, but we also weren't
designed to stand all day. I think that's true. If we were to look back at our species over tenser or hundreds or thousands of years, we
would find that indeed we did sit down.
We did lie down.
It wasn't that we were standing all day long.
That said, most everybody, at least in the US, is not getting sufficient cardiovascular
exercise or movement throughout the day.
And standing at one's desk can improve some of
those health metrics and again can improve productivity probably because of those postural effects that
I talked about earlier that when we lie down there tends to be less alertness in our in our brainstem
if you will there's less activation of those brainstem circuits involved in alertness and indeed
that circuits that involve a kind of a calming effect on the body get activated.
And as we become upright, standing or sitting, but especially standing, then those brainstem
circuits for alertness kick on, which are going to make it easier to remain focused.
If you are going to start standing for half of your work time, you will notice that it takes
a few days to adapt.
You'll notice a lot of shifting from side to side.
You definitely want to wear comfortable shoes. People will do that it takes a few days to adapt. You'll notice a lot of shifting from side to side. Definitely want to wear comfortable shoes. Some people will do this
on a wooden floor. Other people feel uncomfortable unless they're on carpet. You have to figure
out what works for you, but it can take a little bit of time to adapt. I have to say after
now about 10 years of working at a sit-stand desk, I find I can't sit for too long before I
want to stand. And my standing belts can be anywhere from 30 minutes to two hours, although
two hours would be a little bit long.
And then I catch myself kind of leaning on the desk
off to the side.
So again, the idea is to stand, but not be leaning on the desk.
Obviously, if you're typing or you're writing,
there'll be some leaning involved.
But that's what the literature support.
There is also a literature on whether or not physical movement
under your desk, meaning tread milling, or in fact, there are now bicycles
that allow people to pedal.
It's kind of a unicycle-like thing,
although not a unicycle.
Under the desk can be beneficial for workplace performance.
So let's take a look at what those data say.
The study that I'm referring to has a first author,
Fraudsham, F-R-O-D-S-H-A-M, Fraudsham at all.
This is a research article published in PLOS-1,
and the title of the article is,
does type of active workstation matter
a randomized comparison of cognitive
and typing performance between rest, cycling,
and treadmill active workstations?
It's amazing that people do this science.
I think it's great.
Where else would we get peer review data
on these types of questions?
First things first, there were no significant differences between cycling or treadmill work
stations on any cognitive or typing outcomes. So it does not seem to matter whether or not people
are treadmilling under the desk. So these would be stationary treadmills. It's like a little
conveyor that people are walking on. Sometimes very slowly, I'm guessing some people walk more quickly. The New Yorker is probably treadmill quicker. The Californians probably treadm like a little conveyor that people are walking on sometimes very slowly. I get I'm guessing some people walk more quickly
The New Yorkers probably treadmill quicker the Californians probably treadmill a little slower
I'm a Californian so I can make that quote unquote joke
But nonetheless there were no significant differences between that and a cycling station where people are sitting and pedaling as they type away
Whereas they work or as they are on phone calls, etc
So it really doesn't seem to matter. So if you're going to embrace these active workstations,
as they're called, just decide what you would prefer to use.
It doesn't seem to matter in terms of outcomes.
Now, this study involved looking at 137 young adults.
They had multiple sessions where they,
at first, completed cognitive and typing tests.
These tests have different names and you're welcome to look those up if you like, as well
as flanker tasks.
So these are tasks of attention and things of that sort.
And then they either engaged in treadmill or cycling and then there was a comparison.
And the statistics were run.
And basically what they found was there was a statistically significant improvement in attention and cognitive control scores during any kind of active session
as opposed to just a mere seated session.
Okay, so they compared seated to cycling to treadmilling.
However, verbal memory scores actually got worse during active sessions.
So I'll repeat that.
Treadmilling or the cycling workstations
improved attention and cognitive control scores
as compared to people that were just seated and working.
However, verbal memory scores got worse
during the active sessions.
And again, just to repeat,
there was no difference between cycling
and treadmill workstations.
So this is interesting.
It suggests that as the authors say
that active workstations, whether walking or cycling, are
not only useful to improve caloric output and physical activity, circulation, and so on,
but particularly when completing tasks, like cognitive tasks or tasks that require focus,
that do not require verbal memory recall.
Now why verbal memory recall was negatively impacted?
We don't know.
Could be because people are breathing a little bit harder, could be that
there's something about walking and talking that seems incompatible in the nervous system,
although I'm not aware of that.
I know a number of people who can walk and talk at the same time.
But if you are going to explore these treadmills or you're going to explore these cycling stations,
you probably wouldn't want to do that for highly verbal work, maybe more for mathematical
work or for analytic work or even creative work, but anything that involves very precise
or detailed verbal recall, sitting or standing seems to be the better option.
And if you're wondering why cycling or treadmilling would enhance various aspects of cognition,
we can speculate.
I've talked before about this, but anytime we are generating forward movement through
our own actions, our own efforts.
Typically if we are outside, we're not on a treadmill or we're on a bicycle or we're running
or even on a motorcycle or in a car, we have what's called optic flow.
That optic flow is known to quiet certain areas of the brain that are associated
with vigilance and indeed fear. This is the basis of things like EMDR, eye movement,
desensitization, reprocessing. However, the mere act of engaging what are called our central
pattern generators, the neurons in our brain stemming in our spinal cord that engage repetitive
movements also can reduce some of the areas of the brain
that are associated with anxiety and vigilance.
So one pure speculation, but nonetheless grounded speculation, would be that treadmilling
or cycling in a desk would reduce anxiety that would allow performance to improve.
The other, what I think is more likely explanation is that anytime we are in ambulation, we recruit
the release of neuromodulators like epinephrine, dopamine, and things of that sort,
that further increase overall levels of alertness. I think that's the more likely explanation, because it's hard to imagine how just a reduction in anxiety could lead to these improvements in cognition in a direct way.
Whereas the subject in the study I just mentioned, on average, experienced an increase in cognitive
performance merely by movement.
And this does not include any optic flow because it's stationary, the treadmill or the
cyclist stationary.
And so we can rule out that optic flow.
And that points to the idea that when we are in movement, we recruit neuromodulators,
associate with the so-called particular activating system, the striatal system, and so forth, that would place the brain into some pattern.
We don't know.
We only can speculate some pattern, perhaps it's gamma waves
or some other wave pattern, that would engage heightened levels
of focus and attention.
Nonetheless, treadmill, cycling at a desk
does improve cognition.
So we've been discussing workspace optimization
with the understanding that you're not always going to work in the same place every day. What I've tried
to do is give you a set of high-potency tools that can improve your focus in
cognition and to place that within a framework for particular kinds of work.
Let's just review some of the basic elements of what we've covered today.
First of all, in the first part of your day, that zero to nine hours after waking,
you want bright lights, especially overhead lights,
as bright as you can keep them without feeling uncomfortable
or certainly not without feeling any pain
in your eyes or elsewhere in your body.
Bright lights make for the maximum state of alertness.
In addition, try and place whatever it is
that you're focusing on directly in front of you
but not have it extend too far out to either side of your eyes.
Try and generate a fairly restricted visual window as we call it.
And if you can, try and place whatever it is you're focusing on at least at nose level
or above.
It might take some engineering or some ingenuity and creativity in order to figure out how
to do that, but that's going to be most beneficial. Try and avoid reclining, try and avoid sitting, try and stand for at least half of your work day.
That's a good goal, and it may take some time to work up to that goal.
In addition, if you're going to use sound as a stimulus for increasing focus and alertness,
try and avoid exposure to white noise, pink noise, or brown noise for extended periods of time
for more than an hour or so.
That might actually be damaging to the auditory system.
And at the very least, it's kind of stressful,
even though you might not notice it.
It's kind of a background level of anxiety
and stress that is not going to serve you well.
Rather, if you're going to pursue particular types
of sound frequencies, consider using 40 Hertz
binoral beats, not monoreal beats, but 40 hertz
binoreal beats done during a particular work-about or for 30 minutes prior to that work-about.
I would not rely on binoreal beats all the time every day.
I think that could cause them to lose their potency just because of the way the auditory
system attenuates and actually experience that attenuation, the mere fact that you can
go into an environment where there's an air conditioner blowing, blowing blowing, and then it stops and you feel
that relaxation, but you weren't thinking about the air conditioner before.
It tells you that your auditory system had kind of attenuated to it, and yet it was still
impacting your system.
You were sensing it, we would say, but not perceiving it.
There are other things that you can do to improve your workspace optimization, such as standing for half the day, as I mentioned
before, but if you're interested in this or you feel like it suits you to treadmill,
finestationary treadmill that you can walk on. I've never tried this before. Maybe after this
episode, given what I've read in the peer reviewed research and it's pretty compelling,
that treadmilling seems like an interesting way to increase alertness and cognitive performance.
I'm not sure that I would do the cycling method
because I can't imagine just cycling and typing
at the same time that sort of feels like they're,
like I actually can do the rub your tummy pat,
top of your head kind of thing,
but it still feels like a little bit
of a sort of a cognitive motor collision for me,
for whatever reason, but that's just my bias.
I do know how to ride a bicycle,
but anyway, you pick your preference.
Some other things that you could do in order to improve your workplace performance would
be to consider the cathedral effect.
If you're going to do analytic work for any part of the day, phase one or phase two as I described
them, but really in any time of day, that detailed analytic work for which there is a correct answer,
learning scales of music, learning mathematics, trying to figure out the solution to a problem where there is a correct answer. Learning scales of music, learning mathematics,
trying to figure out the solution to a problem
where there is indeed a solution.
It could be an interpersonal problem as well.
Then try and get into an environment
with a relatively low ceiling.
If you don't have access to a low ceiling environment,
you might consider using a brimmed hat or even a hoodie,
or even just facing down,
or even putting your hand above your eyes,
as you will, at the level of your of your eyebrows
In other words lower the ceiling. That's the basis of the cathedral effects of on analytic performance
in contrast if you're interested in doing
brainstorming creative work
You're writing new things you're creating new things of any kind artwork consider getting into a high ceiling or no ceiling
environment
Or if you're wearing a brimmed hat or you're wearing a hoodie maybe peel that back of any kind, artwork, consider getting into a high ceiling or no ceiling environment, or
if you're wearing a brimmed hat or you're wearing a hoodie, maybe peel that back.
Again, the data within the peer-reviewed literature are there to support these sorts of practices.
And if you'd like to start layering these protocols, by all means, please do that.
There's no reason why you couldn't do one or just two of these protocols.
There's no reason why, for instance, you couldn't use binomial beats
and try and get into a low ceiling environment
to do detailed work a couple of times a week,
but you could also employ all of these.
Now, of course, there are an enormous number of other things
that you can do to improve work performance and productivity.
And I've talked about those in previous episodes
in particular in the episode on focus
and the episode on motivation.
There are supplements
you can take that can increase dopamine, for instance. There are tools that you can use to increase
your focus, for instance, focusing your visual attention on one location for 30 to 60 seconds,
prior to entering a focused work-out. This has been shown again and again. They work from Emily
Balsettis at NYU. In the episode on focus, I cited a number of studies where this has actually been tested
and deployed in various schools, having kids do a focus task where they look at a particular
visual target for 30 to 60 seconds, then doing some mathematics, and seeing pretty impressive
improvement in focus and attention, even in people that have attention deficit, hyperactivity,
disorder, and so on.
So there's no reason why you can't and shouldn't combine the sort of practical workspace optimization
solutions that we talked about today with the kind of neural optimization solutions that
we talked about in the episode on focus and the episode on ADHD and the episode on motivation.
Biomeans layer those together.
That's how you're going to achieve the optimal focus bounce.
That's how you're going to achieve the optimal focus bounce. That's how you're going to achieve the optimal creativity.
Bouts, I do want to acknowledge again the fact that I realize people are showing up to
this challenge of workspace optimization with different budgets, with different constraints.
Some people have kids at home.
There are a lot of interruptions.
Some people do not.
Nonetheless, I hope that the information I was able to provide today will allow you to
make subtle or maybe even drastic rearrangements in your workspace environment.
There's one other point related to that that I did not cover and that I'd like to cover
just briefly, which is that there's nothing to say that you have to always work in the
same location all the time.
You can move from house to cafe, if that works for you, you can move from office to home,
you can also move from different to cafe. If that works for you, you can move from office to home. You can also move from different locations
within your home.
I have a brief anecdote about this.
I used to attend a lot of scientific meetings
when a lot of scientific meetings were in person.
And there were always a few individuals
that seemed to stay engaged throughout these very long meetings.
And we're talking seven, eight hour days,
sometimes evening sessions, and sometimes
these meetings would go on for four or five or even six days.
These were long meetings.
The quality of talks varied tremendously.
I always noticed the individuals that managed to stay engaged and awake for the entire meeting.
I noticed that people that could maintain high levels of alertness in this one conference
room had a habit of moving to
a different seat after each session.
Sometimes even between talks, and I actually discuss this with one of my colleagues who
was doing this, I said, is this conscious?
Are you always moving from place to place?
And they said, yeah, if I just stay in one place and I just look from this one particular
visual angle at the screen, I find after one or two talks, regardless of how interesting
the talks are, that I start to kind of drift.
My mind is and does engage and indeed sometimes can fall asleep.
So I started this practice of moving from space to space or I should say seat to seat within
an auditorium and it works quite well.
I think it works quite well because again of the relationship between our visual system
driving the majority of our cognition, right?
Our visual system drives our thinking in that novel visual environments
are going to lend themselves to heightened levels of alertness. You don't want things to
be so novel and scary or threatening or anxiety-provoking or loud that they draw your attention
away from your work. But I think this is part of the reason why turning on music or moving
to an office or a cafe or an outdoor environment from an indoor environment or vice versa,
maybe even within a single day, can bring about more heightened levels of productivity.
I'd also like to acknowledge that what I covered today is most certainly not exhaustive for all
the types of workspace optimization tools that one could create. For that reason, I'd love for
you to suggest any of your workspace optimization tools that you found useful. Please put those in
the comment section on YouTube.
That would be the best place than other people can see them.
Also read through those and perhaps in a future episode, I'll call about some of the ones
that I've tried on the basis of your suggestions.
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