In the News: Multitasking Impacts Revenues

Printer-friendly version


Multitasking, often presented as a virtue of the digital age, is turning out to be what many people initially thought it was—a productivity-damaging distraction.

Multitasking, often presented as a virtue of the digital age, is turning out to be what many people initially thought it was—a productivity-damaging distraction. One expert, Jonathan Spira, chief analyst at Basex, estimates that interruptions created by multitasking cost the U.S. economy nearly $650 billion a year. Companies as large as Microsoft are feeling the financial effects.

The problem stems from the fact that human brains were designed to work efficiently on one task at a time, using a hundred billion neurons and hundreds of trillions of synaptic connections. We can multitask if necessary, but we function better on a single task. 'Multitasking is going to slow you down, increasing the chances of mistakes," said David Meyer of the University of Michigan (Steve Lohr, 'Slow Down, Brave Multitasker, and Don't Read This in Traffic," The New York Times, March 25, 2007).

Related Content

Posted January 24, 2005
Posted February 3, 2005

Nobody has commented yet. Be the first to kick off the discussion!

Login/Register to post comments
© 1995-2012 United Church of God, an International Association | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. All correspondence and questions should be sent to info@ucg.org. Send inquiries regarding the operation of this Web site to webmaster@ucg.org.



X
You may login with either your assigned username or your e-mail address.
The password field is case sensitive.
Loading