Science Vs - Boredom: Is It Good For You?
Episode Date: April 30, 2026We keep hearing that we need to be BORED more, with people online swearing that boredom can work magic — restoring your mind, and even supercharging your creativity. So, is boredom secretly good for... us? We talk to cognitive neuroscientist Prof. James Danckert and organizational psychologist Prof. Guihyun Park to find out. Find our transcript here: https://tinyurl.com/ScienceVsBoredom In this episode, we cover: (00:00) They say we need more boredom (02:06) This is your brain on boredom (12:30) Does boredom push us into creativity? (22:08) Should you try to be more bored? (23:53) When you give your brain time to rest This episode was produced by Michelle Dang, with help from Meryl Horn, Rose Rimler and Ekedi Fausther-Keeys. Wendy Zukerman is our executive producer. We’re edited by Blythe Terrell. Fact checking by Erica Akiko Howard. Mix and sound design by Bobby Lord. Music written by Bobby Lord, Bumi Hidaka, So Wylie, Emma Munger and Peter Leonard. Science Vs is a Spotify Studios Original. Listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us and tap the bell for episode notifications. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Wendy Zuckerman, and this is Science Bessers.
Today on the show, we're pitting facts against feeling bored.
Across the internet, people are embracing being bored.
Raw dogging boredom for one hour.
Raw dogging one hour straight.
No phone, no TV, no music, no moving, no sleeping for an hour straight.
That's right, they're raw dogging boredom.
There's all these videos of people.
recording themselves, sitting on the floor of their bedroom, doing basically nothing, in some cases, for hours.
And why are they doing this? Raw dogging boredom?
The problem is we've created a way of living where you do not need to be bored at all.
And the second you feel bored, you grab your phone.
Like people like to say, oh, I just can't be bored.
I'm the type of person who always has to be doing something, right?
That's justifying the addiction.
Influences are telling us that we need to push back again.
this addiction and embrace boredom like a lost art.
They say that being bored is actually good for us,
and it could inspire us to be more imaginative and creative.
We kind of treat boreddom as if it's something to fix.
But what if I tell you that boredom is actually the starting point of creativity?
Einstein and Newton got their biggest ideas when they were bored and doing nothing.
So, would we all be Einstein's if we just raw-dog some boredom?
Today on the show, the power of being bored.
What exactly is going on in our brains when we're bored?
And could we really supercharge our minds if we just embraced a bitter boredom?
When it comes to boredom, there's a lot of...
And then there's science.
Science versus boredom, we'll be coming up just after the break.
Need a vehicle that isn't a...
to make a splash?
That's the Volkswagen Taos.
Capable and confident, the Volkswagen Taos is fit for everyday life.
Nimble in traffic, agile and tight spots, and still spacious enough for weekend getaways.
While available 4-motion all-wheel drive gives confidence in rain and snow.
The capable Taos, you deserve more confidence.
Visit v.w.ca to learn more.
SUV-W, German engineered for all.
It's never too early to plan your summer story in Europe with WestJet
From rolling countryside to cobblestone streets
Begin your next chapter
Book your seat at westjet.com or call your travel agent
WestJet where your story takes off
Welcome back, I'm Wendy Zuckerman.
Today we are digging into the science on boredom
And to tell me all about it
Here's producer Michelle Dang
Hey Wendy
Hello Michelle. How do you feel about your boredom levels?
Are you bored right now?
No, I'm never bored when I'm talking to you.
So when I hear people online talking about this, I do find myself nodding along because, I don't know, I don't feel that bored anymore.
But I am one of those people who are always picking my phone to look at something.
So how do you feel?
Have you been bored lately?
I do worry that by constantly shoving things in my brain, you know, whether that's work.
mindless scrolling.
Sometimes it does feel like you're literally just jamming your brain full of things.
It's just this constant stimulation.
And sometimes it really does feel like my brain is just saying,
no, I'm too full right now.
And it just wants to go and just be empty.
And I don't let it be bored and empty.
So I'm very excited to know what is going on in my brain.
brain that is that feeling of just be still. Yeah, I wanted to know about that too. So we're going to
dig into your brain on boredom. And to start, I talked to a cognitive neuroscientist named
Professor James Dankert from the University of Waterloo in Canada. Great. And James and a colleague
actually did a study looking exactly at this, the brain on boredom. So let me tell you about what
they did. So they stuck 10 people into an fMRI machine and proceeded to
bore the crap out of them.
Which isn't hard in an fM right.
It's a boring space.
That's true.
But this is like a little step further.
So listen to this.
Okay.
So to do that,
we had them watch an eight-minute video
of two guys hanging laundry.
That's really quite effective at making people bored.
Do you want to see pictures of what it looked like?
Oh, sure.
Oh, my God.
That video, that screenshot of the video of two guys doing laundry.
I don't know why.
But it looks even more boring that I had imagined.
I think because I was picturing the guys outside doing laundry on a sunny day.
But actually they're just inside a house.
They look so bored.
It's like a dim beige room.
Oh, yeah.
I would hate that.
And this was like a four-minute clip that was on loop.
They got to watch it twice inside the machine.
And then they had their brains do other stuff too.
For example, they had the participants watch an interesting video instead.
It was a clip from BBC's Planet Earth, actually, with beautiful landscapes, music, a sea turtle, all that jazz.
Yes, yes. I've seen it. It's incredibly interesting, yes.
And then James and his colleague, they looked at all their brains in these different states to see what was going on.
And what James noticed when people were bored were changes in a couple of systems in the brain.
So let me start with this particular one that was all lit up.
It's known as the default mode network.
And this is a network of brain areas that is more active when there is no external task for you to do.
So people will also call it an off-task network.
It's active in things like daydreaming or mind-wandering.
It's active when you sort of prospectively think about the future.
Have you heard about the default mode network before?
Yeah, yeah.
It's interesting because I guess I associate.
boredom with thinking of nothing.
But you're right, it's more when you've got,
when you're just watching guys doing laundry,
your mind just wanders into its default state.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Here's James.
It just turned out that video was so mind-numbingly dull
that they disengaged from it
and activated this default network.
And then what happened to the brains in the group
that got to watch that interesting video with the turtles
and planet Earth.
Yeah, so in that group,
it looked like the DMN was less active,
so they didn't see the same pattern,
probably because there was a bunch of great stuff
to focus on in that clip.
Uh-huh, that makes sense.
So does it matter
whether the default mode network is odd or off?
Well, the people online love to clamor
about the DMN.
Uh-huh.
They say it's a really important system in our brain,
and that part is true.
We know that the DMN plays a role
in our sense of self, like it's active when we self-reflect,
when we think about the past or the future,
or when we process our emotions,
all this stuff happens when we're just resting too.
So is the default mode network always good when it's activated?
Because I feel like sometimes when my mind wonders,
it just goes back to these kind of negative thoughts,
often revolving around the theme of you're not good enough in some way.
Yeah, so this is the flip side of this.
It doesn't make sense to claim that activating the DMN is always good
and that we should just be sitting in a room,
shutting everything out for hours at a time.
For example, an overactive DMN can be linked to things like ruminating
and negative thoughts.
And of course we know that we don't always think good thoughts
when our mind is wandering.
Yes, of course, right.
Yeah, you start watching this video about laundry,
you get bored, who knows where your mind is going to go.
Mm-hmm.
when it taps into this default mode network.
Interesting.
What else did James find in this study?
Yeah, so while James saw the DMN perk up when people are bored,
he also noticed this other part of the brain that showed less activity.
It's called the insular cortex,
and it's part of something called the salience network.
I associate the insular cortex with understanding what's happening in our own body, feeling pain.
Yeah, yeah.
And it also plays a role in figure out what's out there,
like in our environment versus what we're feeling inside and then what to do with it.
Like James was saying it basically helps us choose what's most important at that moment to pay attention to.
We're saying there's really nothing interesting here for you to look at.
Nothing that would help you pursue a goal.
Oh, and during boredom, that part of the brain dialed down.
Yeah, exactly.
So it dialed down, but it's also almost lying in wait for ways to escape the boredom.
because we know from other research that this part of the brain lights up and gets more active
when people are given the opportunity to escape the boredom,
like when they're presented something that's actually interesting for them to do.
So James says that this insular cortex...
This part of your brain, this network, is trying to say, okay, I've just been bored to death.
I've got to find something.
And so here's where we're going with this.
Here's the punchline, yeah.
Before my insular cortex completely switches off, Michelle, let's get to the punchline.
So the idea here is that your brain is signaling you to find, like, whatever you can to escape the monotony of boredom.
Okay.
Because, Wendy, like, our brains do not like being bored.
And scientists actually define boredom as a negative thing, like a negative state of mind.
When we're bored, we want something that matters to us, but we don't want anything that's currently available to us.
And so that's why boredom is a sort of, it's a sort of, it's.
It's a motivating emotion because it's calling you to find that thing that's going to work.
But it's also an agitated sort of restless feeling because clearly if you're bored,
you're not satisfying that desire to be engaged.
And you know, some people will go to huge lengths to avoid boredom.
Like there's this famous study where scientists looked at whether people would rather shock themselves
than sit around being bored in a room.
Yes, I have heard of this study.
But what, I never read it though.
What did they actually do?
Yeah, it's pretty fun.
So the researchers had these people sit in a room with nothing to do for 15 minutes.
Uh-huh.
And they had electrodes on their ankles, which were connected to a button they could press to activate this shock.
And when people tested out the shock, guess what?
Most of them said the shock sucked and they didn't like it.
Yes.
However, these same people who didn't like it, 40% of them shocked themselves at least once when they got into the room.
40% within 15 minutes of being bored.
Yes.
Of sitting in an empty room, almost half of them shocked themselves.
And it wasn't out of curiosity.
They knew what the shock was like and they knew they didn't like it.
Right.
And Wendy, there was somebody who shocked himself 190 times.
That, I mean, they liked it, that person.
Probably.
Okay.
And other studies have since repeated this showing that,
many of us would rather shock ourselves or do something against our own interests when we're bored
because I guess boredom just sucks more.
I mean, people do, we do crazy things when we're bored.
I remember this study from a while ago that asked people to name all the reasons they have sex
and one of them was bored, which isn't crazy, but I mean, I've had friends who sleep with their
exes because they're bored.
You know, they'll just text their ex.
someone they actively do not like because they're bored.
Yeah.
So then the question is, so we know boredom is a state our brain doesn't like
and we will do things that are bad for us in order to escape the boredom.
But should we persevere in that bored state?
Will it give us some benefit?
Yeah, Wendy, that's my next question.
If our brains get bored, could that lead us?
to the land of creativity.
Exactly.
That is coming up after the break.
Right.
RBC Training Ground has discovered potential
in over 20,000 Canadian athletes and counting.
Your story could be next.
If you've got the drive,
they'll help you find your path to the Olympics.
Let's see what you've got.
Sign up for free at rbc training ground.ca.
Amazon presents Jeff versus Taco Truck Salsa,
whether it's Verde, Roja, or the orange.
one. For Jeff, trying any salsa is like playing Russian roulette with a flamethrower.
Luckily, Jeff saved with Amazon and stocked up on antacids, ginger tea, and milk.
Habaniero? More like habanier, yes. Save the everyday with Amazon.
Welcome aboard via rail. Please sit and enjoy. Please sit and sip. Play. Post. Taste.
view and enjoy via rail love the way.
Welcome back.
Today on the show, we're talking about boredom,
is this estate that we should be aspiring to.
Michelle Dang, a producer here at Science Versus,
is about to tell us whether being bored can actually inspire creativity.
So, can it?
Yeah, that is the big claim we're hearing from the internet people
that boredom will unlock and push you into creativity.
Yes.
To get some science on this, we need to meet Professor Guy Han Park from Korea University.
She's an organizational psychologist, and Guy Han got interested in boredom about a decade ago
when she was finding herself stuck in some pretty boring meetings.
It was usually the faculty meetings are really boring.
Nothing that interests me, and it's just passing time.
Something like that very boring tone of voice and monotonous.
You cannot escape.
Like, you just feel stuck.
It's true.
It's so true.
Yeah, yeah.
And Guyan would notice something about how she was spending time in these moments.
She was picking up her pen and doodling and then writing new ideas.
Oh, okay, so planning some new things, new research ideas, blah, blah, blah.
I can, like, occupy myself by doing it instead of.
feeling the torture.
Oh, yeah.
She's able to switch her brain into a productive state
rather than kicking herself in the shins under the table.
So sometimes she'd use that boring time
to work out solutions for problems she was having
or finding new ways to do an experiment.
Great.
And she started wondering, like,
does this happen to everyone?
And particularly, like, if we make people bored,
can we spark creativity?
Mm-hmm.
So what Gihon did is she got together
this big group of students.
And to get them bored and see if creativity fell at the other side,
she didn't show them a video of dudes doing laundry.
She did something a little different.
She gave people a huge bowl of beans.
And these are beans in two different colors, told them to sit there and separate the beans out by color.
And I'm sure this sounds familiar to you, Wendy, because I asked you to do this experiment, too.
Yes, you did.
Yeah, so I asked you to record yourself doing it, so here's a bit of that.
Pour both beans into the largest bowl.
Mix them well together.
Start a timer for 30 minutes.
Sort the beans one at a dime by moving all the red beans into your second bowl.
Okay.
Here are my red beans going in.
Chickpeas going in.
Okay, now I'm going to mix them up.
Time starts now.
And to make it even worse, Gwihun designed it so that you did it.
Just one by one using one hand so that it's monotonous.
So Guillaan did this with over 50 students in a bit.
big hall and here's what happened.
So they do engage in one by one and then after five minutes you can feel that the entire
room was filled with boredom.
Could you see the boredom on their faces?
Oh yes.
Yes.
Yes.
They were really bored.
They become really slow.
You can see their actions getting really slow.
And then they were not like.
they lost their emotions on the face, right?
The numbing kind of face.
Wendy, you had that numbing kind of face by the end to...
Oh, yeah.
Here's some type of you if you've forgotten it.
I forgot the rule about just using one hand for a moment.
And then I was back to using one hand.
Ooh.
Now I'm just kind of throwing them in, like playing basketball.
Gosh, it feels never-ending, though, because they're, am I really going to separate them completely?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I'm getting bored just listening back to myself.
It's funny, I didn't know, I didn't know if I, I was bored, but my mind kept wondering.
It kept hitting that default state where I started thinking about other things in my life.
And then I, but my hand would keep, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, so that was the boredom arm.
And of course, there was a control group too.
Glihan had another group that she didn't want to be bored,
so she had them make art with the beans on a white piece of paper for the 30 minutes.
So after the 30 minutes of either sorting beans or making bean art was up,
then came the creativity part.
Everyone in the experiment had to answer a prompt, which I made you read out loud.
Right.
Imagine a hypothetical situation in which person A is two hours late for a work meeting.
list all of the feasible and justifiable reasons person A could use to account for being late
so that person A would not be perceived negatively by their teammates.
There are no right or wrong responses.
Please generate as many ideas as possible.
Okay.
Tamma, tamma, time, time.
And five minutes, let's go.
Broken leg.
I mean, help.
Broken ankle, broken neck.
I think I want to run here.
This feels like cheating, though.
Helped older person with the bins, but then they trapped you.
UTI.
The UTI is, yeah, that's bad.
Really big fight with partner.
You found out your partner cheated on you.
You gave birth.
Then they should just be happy you came to the meeting at all.
Rhinoceros incident went out the zoo.
Because, yeah.
Like a rhinoceros maybe pooed on you again.
Wendy, you came up with a lot of good ideas.
Did I do okay?
I always feel like I want to win.
Did I win, Michelle?
Compared to the study, I think you went above and beyond with how many you came up with.
Thanks, Michelle.
35?
Yeah, what did other people come up with?
Oh, yeah, there were some really great responses that they got to.
Oh, Alien just visited my house, so I need to deal with him, you know, for a couple of minutes, and then I sent him home.
or, oh, bird's shton my face,
so I have to go back home and then change my whole clothing and stuff.
I feel like I was on the someone's shton you sort of frame of mind.
Yeah, wasn't it a rhino?
Yeah, I feel like me and that person who said that would have really gelled.
For a bird shitting on your face, you don't get two hours of leeway, right?
You can clean that off.
It's a pretty bad day, though.
It's true, on the face.
But what were you doing at a zoo before work?
Hmm, good question.
Okay, but then the question is, right, of this whole experiment is,
had I done the creative task, had I instead made an art project out of beans?
Would I have been even more creative or did boredom inspire creativity?
What did she find?
Yeah, so when Guy Hun looked at all the data across the groups,
she found that, yes, people in the boredom group came out with more unique
and creative responses than the people who were making Giener.
And just like you, they were also able to come up with a lot more ideas than the art group.
Huh.
I found the significant finding that boredom actually can increase the creative performance.
I was like, oh, okay.
Interesting.
That is interesting because what it did feel like, after sorting the beans for half an hour,
my brain was really keen to find something interesting.
Oh.
And then I could grab onto.
this new project of all the silly excuses I could come up with.
It was like, it was like roaring.
It was like, let me out of here.
It was raw dogging almost.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So boredom can inspire creativity?
Well, maybe.
Other research into this has been a bit mixed.
Like some studies find boredom boosts creativity and others don't.
And there was a review that said, quote,
no clearly negative or positive relationship could be pinpointed between
boredom and creativity, end quote.
What a boring result.
But we might have an explanation for why it felt like the boredom worked for you and feels
helpful to other people too.
So, Gihun did another version of this bean experiment, but this time she also gave them
personality tests.
And she found that bored people were more likely to be creative if they ranked higher
in certain traits.
Uh-huh.
Things like need for cognition and openness to experience.
Need for cognition.
Does some people not have a need for cognition?
I think some people have more of a need for a cognition.
Okay.
All right.
I guess I have a high need for cognition.
So what is then where do you land on this?
Bortem, we clearly don't like it.
But is it good or bad?
should I try to be bored more?
Well, even though Guy Han found some potential benefit for creativity,
overall it's not clear that boredom is the state that you want your mind to be in.
As we talked about, it especially doesn't feel great.
Here's James again.
I've had people before say to me, I don't mind being bored.
I like being bored.
You know, boredom's fine.
And what you find out when you probe them is that they're not talking about boredom at all.
What they're talking about is relaxation or disqualdom.
connection. They're talking about sort of disengaging from the thrust and parry of their everyday lives,
or they're disengaging from social networks, or they're disengaging from devices or whatever,
and they're doing very little. They're not doing much. And they say, yeah, that's fine. I like it.
It's like, well, yeah, okay, that's great, but it's not boredom. We don't need more boredom.
We just need more intentional engagement. Or intentional disengagement.
Yes.
From the thrust and parry of life.
Yeah, do you like that?
I do. I do. I do.
Mm-hmm. So James says exactly that, like intentional engagement could be choosing to veg out. It could be choosing to relax.
Right. And that there is this difference. You want a raw dog disconnection from the thrust and parry. You think we could get that as a hashtag going.
Okay. Hashtag raw dog disconnection. Yes. Yes. Is that right?
Yes. Apologies for the incredibly 2010 reference at this point.
point. But away from that, Wendy, I found some science that shows that there is some benefit to just
letting your brain rest, particularly with memory. So letting your brain rest can actually help you remember
stuff that you learn. So scientists will give people a list of words or a story to remember and then
have them rest afterward with nothing to do. Or they'll have them do something mentally engaging,
like play a game or scroll social media.
And when they quizzed them afterward, they found that the people who are giving time to rest after learning actually have better recall.
Oh, that's cool.
And it feels very relatable.
And we think this is because when you learn something, your brain creates a new neural pathway.
But when you give your brain a chance to rest, it lets that pathway repeat back and forth over and over again and consolidate that information.
Even five to ten minutes of rest can boost your memory in this way.
Oh, that is cool, picturing our brain doing that.
It sounds a little bit like meditation.
Well, in some of the research, they literally just tell people to sit in a chair and relax,
which is a bit different to meditation techniques.
All right, well, let's give our mind, before we recap the app,
let's give our minds a little bit of rest.
Okay.
Are you getting bored?
Not yet.
Okay, no, me neither.
What about now?
I'm good.
All right.
So here's what I've learned about boredom, Michelle.
Yes, please tell me.
Bortem is a state that your brain doesn't like
and that you don't have to persevere through in order to get benefits.
Probably what a lot of us are seeking right now is just,
stillness, quiet peace.
And get off like the hamster wheel.
Get off the hamster wheel.
Raw dog, that state of mind.
You meant raw dog disconnection from the Thruston Perry.
Raw dog disconnection from the Thruston Perry.
All right. Thanks, Michelle.
Thank you, Wendy.
That's science verses.
And if you want to get in touch with us, let us know what you
thought of the episode. You can pop a comment if you're listening to this on Spotify or you can find
us on Instagram, Science underscore VS. I'm on TikTok at Wendy Zook. Come and say hello. Before we get to the
citations, we have a special segment for you where I answer questions from you guys, our listeners.
So here it is. Today's Ask Wendy Anything. Ask Me Anything is brought to you by Amazon Health AI.
Amazon Health AI is here to stop the late night internet help searches.
it can connect your symptoms with your medical history
to offer personalized care 24-7,
so call off the search.
Here to ask me some questions,
the senior producer Rose Rimla.
Hey, Rose.
Hey.
Okay, so someone who goes by T on TikTok
has asked,
how do you protect your mental health with science deniers?
Ooh, thanks.
That sounds like a very caring question.
When I am feeling down,
it can make me feel quite down.
Yeah, I mean, I can really struggle with this.
I particularly struggle because I think on this show,
on Science Versus, we work really hard to get the facts out to people.
And it's difficult to watch as other voices are louder and talking nonsense,
but have the appearance of being legitimate.
You know what I mean?
Whether they're wearing a lab coat or...
Using big fancy words.
Maybe they're even aligned to a fancy university,
and yet I still know they're talking rubbish.
I really struggle with that.
I guess the question is, how do I protect myself?
I guess I just focus on what we can do,
which is we pump out good information that we trust.
And on a good day, I just focus on that.
Sounds good.
We got another one from The Painting Nihilist on Instagram.
What was the last movie you watched in the theater?
And what did you think of it?
The Substance with Demi Moore.
Memorable movie.
Memorable.
And it was even more memorable because I watched it on a Monday morning.
And it was just me and this other guy there in an otherwise completely empty theater.
And it's a body horror.
The ending is like, and at the end of it, we just looked at each other and we're like, oh, well, okay, we'll have a good Monday then, all right.
You liked it?
Yeah, I liked it.
It bangs you over the head with its message, but it's a good message nonetheless.
It does bang you over the head, but I like how extreme it took it.
Yeah, do you know, go bigger, go home.
That was today's Ask Me Anything, and it was brought to you by Amazon Health.
AI. Amazon Health AI is here. Healthcare just got less painful. All right, Michelle, hello,
we're back. How many citations were in this week's episode? There are 36 citations. And if people
want to see them, in all their glory, learn more about the science of boredom. Where should they go?
Just head over to our show notes and click on the transcript. All right, cool. Thanks, Michelle.
Bye. Bye, Wendy. Thanks.
This episode was produced by Michelle Dang with help from Merrill Horn, Rose Rimler, and Aketti Foster
Keyes. I'm the executive producer. We're edited by Blythe Terrell. Fact-checking by Erica Akiko
Howard. Mix and sound design by Bobby Lord. Music written by Bobby Lord, Bumirukkah, So Wiley,
Emma Munga and Peter Leonard. Science versus is a Spotify studio's original. Listen to us for free
on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us and tap the bell icon if you want to get
notifications when new episodes come up. I would use to come back to next week.
The Madamy Holmes bike for brain health
supporting Baycrest returns on May 31st
for its fifth anniversary
with a new start and finish at the Aga Khan Museum.
Join thousands of cyclists
as we take over the DVP and Gardner Expressway
in support of dementia research and brain health.
Riders of all abilities are welcome
and both regular bikes and e-bikes can participate.
Bring your friends, family, or corporate team,
and make an impact.
Register today at bikeforbrainhealth.ca.
