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Transportation Handhelds

Study: Push Notifications As Distracting As Taking a Call 60

itwbennett writes: Researchers at Florida State University have found that simply being aware of a missed call or text can have the same damaging effect on task performance as actually using a mobile phone. 'Although these notifications are short in duration, they can prompt task-irrelevant thoughts, or mind-wandering,' the researchers wrote in their paper. In further bad news for chronic multitaskers, a new study by researchers at the University of Connecticut finds that 'students who multitasked while doing homework had to study longer, and those who frequently multitasked in class had lower grades on average than their peers who multitasked less often.'
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Study: Push Notifications As Distracting As Taking a Call

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  • by invictusvoyd ( 3546069 ) on Friday July 24, 2015 @07:20AM (#50173887)
    I frequently listen to music whilst working , studying , coding etc. Does that count as multitasking? AFAIK it only enhances my concentration and cuts off ambient noise .
    • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Friday July 24, 2015 @07:26AM (#50173917) Journal

      I'll just leave this here:

      http://www.studentpulse.com/ar... [studentpulse.com]

      • by asylumx ( 881307 )
        That study compares music to silence while the GP is comparing music to noise. I think there may still be room for additional research there.
        • Ambient noise is (almost) always present. Even a "silent" room, as such for the experiment, was subject to pencil noises, breathing, HVAC air, mechanical vibrations, (and clocks, computer fans, fluor. ballast hum, etc. as appropriate).

          Now ambient as in "people talking in a coffee house" is a whole different matter.

    • Yes, but in a good way.

      Music is something that prevents you from being distracted by other noises, and because you aren't really paying attention to it so it's not a distraction.

      • No. RTA. "These results indicated that stimulative music is a stronger distractor and obstructs cognitive processing more than sedative music does." http://www.studentpulse.com/ar... [studentpulse.com] So it depends on the music one is listening to.

        Bottom line, anything that distacts you from the task at hand, impairs your ability, contrary to what you may think.
        • ... Participating in the music (i.e. singing along or head banging) is more than just listening. Which is where you fail to understand my statement.

          Simply listening to music in the background while doing another task nearly universally makes people more productive and more focused than without.

          Bottom line, anything that distacts you from the task at hand, impairs your ability, contrary to what you may think.

          No shit Sherlock, you figure that one out all by yourself? I'm fairly certain that we all know that before any of these studies even started, after all ... THATS THE MEANING OF DISTRACTION.

          The point is that music i

          • Again, read the study. You are wrong. Background music makes people less productive. This has been shown multiple times.
            • The study seems to say music I don't know is a distraction, which matches my experience.

              Also, I'm curious how it plays out to music free work for hours straight vs the study length.

            • by ruir ( 2709173 )
              If you say so. There is instrumental music, you know? And between hearing music or slaving away in an open office and hearing all the private life of my workmates in their conversations over the phone, phones ringing, people talking, and some idiot or other that does not know yet phones were invented...actually music makes me far much more productive and with less murderous thoughts too.
        • At least with driving, my own thoughts are a bigger distraction. Driving is one of those things that it can be hard to give 100% focus on a long drive, and I've had it drop to near 0% focus without something to keep my brain active. I'd rather be at 30% than have my visual cortex taken over by straying thoughts and daydreams.

      • by tomxor ( 2379126 )

        Music is something that prevents you from being distracted by other noises, and because you aren't really paying attention to it so it's not a distraction.

        Music is good for masking more distracting sound, but it can also be a distractor itself, this depends on both the task at hand and the particular piece of music.

        I find that when thinking about hard problems, any kind of music is really distracting i just want silence. Other times when less concious effort is required, anything from tedious and boring tasks to artistic tasks that rely more on subconscious, music can be a great tool for concentration or inspiration.

    • It depends on *how* you listen ... if you're singing along and dancing, well, it's probably not helping you any.

      But, like most people, if you have it on in the background and it's masking other stuff and/or you're using it to keep you focused, it's probably helping, just like you said.

      I was always a code with headphones kind of guy, and to this day there's a lot of tasks I'd rather be doing with some music to give me an added push.

      But in this case, if your phone is beeping to tell you something shiny has ha

      • My own mind is a bigger distraction. When I try to do any work on a computer at home, I have Netflix on in the background playing some relatively mindless entertainment. If I am doing any tedious work at all, I'd be more likely to end up on Slashdot than actually get work done. Having my brain partly engaged keeps it from wandering - like the groove of a record to the needle.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Depends on the task at hand.

      If it's an almost mind-numbingly boring task, then in a complete absence of other inputs your mind is going to start wandering just to save itself (may be more true of those prone to AD(H)D), in which case music that you're familiar with may balance that out and leave you with enough mental capacity to perform the task well.

      If it's something that requires (or deserves) a little more attention, like studying something you're not familiar with (vs review), then the music may well b

      • Depends on the task at hand.

        Agree. When I was in junior high I worked as a dishwasher. I pretty much had to have a radio going or a book or something to keep my mind from turning into goo. The same with driving. Driving is so repetitive and boring (other than the moments of sheer terror), that having a small distraction like music or talk radio keeps you from falling asleep or going brain dead. But it has to be the sort of distraction that your brain can instantly tune out when it needs to concentrate. Texting sure would not qualify.

    • I frequently listen to music whilst working , studying , coding etc. Does that count as multitasking? AFAIK it only enhances my concentration and cuts off ambient noise .

      I occasionally turn on music while coding, but I find it is distracting. If I hear a song I like on Pandora and am not sure if I gave it a thumbs up, I flip over to see if I did. Other times, I will find myself coding in silence, as the music cut off several hours earlier and I did not notice it.

    • by MacTO ( 1161105 )

      I suspect that the distraction of listening to music is much more dependent on the individual than push notifications would be. I know that I can't handle it, but it is easy to see how a person initiating and selecting their own background noise would be less of a distraction than externally initiated background noise that may have some sense of urgency initiated to it.

      You also have to consider the work environment and how much gets done over the course of a day, rather than the productivity as measured ov

  • Focus! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Mr D from 63 ( 3395377 ) on Friday July 24, 2015 @07:25AM (#50173909)

    students who multitasked while doing homework had to study longer, and those who frequently multitasked in class had lower grades on average than their peers who multitasked less often

    This groundbreaking research has discovered that people that focus on what they are doing perform better than people that don't. I think we need more studies to confirm this.

    • Sorry, I could only make it partway through yo

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Apparently we do considering all the multitasking devotees running around with an effective IQ of 80 or less.

  • In my day... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by puddingebola ( 2036796 ) on Friday July 24, 2015 @07:46AM (#50174017) Journal
    My generation just had drugs and alcohol to destroy our attention span.
  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Friday July 24, 2015 @07:52AM (#50174053)

    When the studies find out notifications aren't distracting, no one tells you about those studies.

    These types of headlines tend to lead to suggestions of more driving restrictions. But driving has never been safer [wikipedia.org]. We don't need our every minute policed by punitive government overseers. We need fewer citizen/police interactions -- those interactions can be very dangerous [wikipedia.org].

    • Somebody failed high school science. The article explains why distraction impair cognitive ability. It is well document that people are distracted while texting or talking on their cell phone and driving. So fuck off. You want to endanger people's lives - move to Somalia.
    • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

      Driving has never been safer because motor vehicles have never been safer and because structurally roads have never been safer. The last one means things like replacing intersections/crossroads with roundabouts where death rates drop 90% as a result.

      On the other hand there are numerous cases of people being killed by txting on a phone, just Google it. Just because driving is safer now than ever before does not justify someone txting on a phone while driving.

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        Just because driving is safer now than ever before does not justify someone txting on a phone while driving.

        But it does justify less aggressive policing of driving in general. We shouldn't have to bear the burden of enforcing as many rules and having them enforced upon us when the dangers are low and dropping all the time.

    • But driving has never been safer. We don't need our every minute policed by punitive government overseers.

      Driving is safer due to little things like mandatory seatbelt laws. Seatbelts are relatively new (50 years old), and were not widely used by people alive when they came out. In the mid-eighties, I think it was 50% adoption. It was 80% a decade ago. Now it's 90-95%. So, maybe [our driving actions] should be policed.

      There are also airbags, etc. And ABS and other technology can help avoid accidents.

      No

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        So, maybe [our driving actions] should be policed.

        The justification for policing actions is "danger". When danger is less, there's less justification for policing actions.

        Driving is safer due to little things like mandatory seatbelt laws.

        Seatbelts help in crashes because of "actions" the same as they help in any other type of crashes. Danger is less.

        • The justification for policing actions is "danger".

          It's not just danger. Regulations that improve traffic flows reduce the risk of accidents. Accidents are expensive and time consuming in addition to dangerous.

          Teslas are incredibly safe... people walk away from 100+ MPH collisions. If everyone drove one, could we get rid of all traffic laws?

          • by Kohath ( 38547 )

            We could get rid of most traffic "laws" regardless of Teslas. We don't need a whole code of laws and penalties for everything everyone does. Change them from "laws" with penalties and police enforcement of every minute detail to "rules" with police enforcement reserved for recklessness and drunk driving.

            People would drive more-or-less the same way they do now. No one wants to crash, and recklessness would still be punished by law. Police would be freed up to actually police bad guys instead of fundraisi

  • I'm SURE that if we just make the office environment JUST A LITTLE more uselessly distracting, employee efficiency will improve dramatically! I'll just sign everyone up for IT downtime and maintenance notifications for every location the company has on the planet, with no way to unsubscribe!
  • Is it any surprise that someone who is focused on the task at hand is more effective than a scatterbrain chasing a dozen different things at once?

    • Is it any surprise that someone who is focused on the task at hand is more effective than a scatterbrain chasing a dozen different things at once?

      Right. But when the Citation? Police start yapping, you'll have one.

      • by msobkow ( 48369 )

        I hope they do arrest your ass if you're yapping/texting on a cell phone while driving -- and taze you for good measure!

        • I hope they do arrest your ass if you're yapping/texting on a cell phone while driving -- and taze you for good measure!

          Holy shit - I have to turn autocorrect off! I can't even figure out what the hell I wrote to you. I should be tazed for not looking before I sent it.

          Belay whatever the hell it looked like I was writing. Mea culpas all around.

  • Depends. They're describing how a lot of people react to missed calls and texts. Not me. I don't care enough. Seriously, I missed a text?BFD. I'll check it when I have a reasonable chance, and until then, I will not think about it at all.

    (Under normal circumstances, obviously. Relative in hospital, then I would be distracted.)

    • You sir, are the exception.

      I see folks in meetings (and my wife under many different circumstances) time and again get all jittery and distracted after getting a text. Usually it is less than 2-3 minute before they just HAVE to check before they can calm down and resume focus. Counting down till the phone slides out under the table is almost as much fun as playing Buzzword Bingo in a meeting.

      I know I am just as bad, so I tend to keep my phone on truly silent, and often don't take it with me to meetings un

  • I don't get enough phone calls or texts for this to be an issue, but I get a ton of email.

    When I'm at my PC, I have "alert me" turned on, because it's usually worth the bother.

    But on my phone, I have everything on "manual." If someone emails me after business hours and I'm not expecting an email, I won't see it until the next day. If I am expecting it, I will either manually check it a few times that evening or I'll temporarily turn on "push."

    By the way, I do know how to put my phone on "silent" and on th

  • what if I get a push notification on a watch? is that destracting as well?

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