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Old 03-19-2007, 01:47 PM
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Paying attention to not paying attention

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Paying attention to not paying attention - Yahoo! News

NEW YORK - Researchers are studying a pervasive psychological phenomenon in which oh man we've got to finish doing the taxes this weekend ... C'mon, admit it. Your train of thought has derailed like that many times. It's just mind-wandering. We all do it, and surprisingly often, whether we're struggling to avoid it or not.

Mainstream psychology hasn't paid much attention to this common mental habit. But a spate of new studies is chipping away at its mysteries and scientists say the topic is beginning to gain visibility.

Someday, such research may turn up ways to help students keep their focus on textbooks and lectures, and drivers to keep their minds on the road. It may reveal ways to reap payoffs from the habit.

And it might shed light on attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, which can include an unusually severe inability to focus that causes trouble in multiple areas of life.

More generally, scientists say, mind-wandering is worth studying because it's just too common to ignore.

Michael Kane, a psychologist at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, sampled the thoughts of students at eight random times a day for a week. He found that on average, they were not thinking about what they were doing 30 percent of the time.

For some students it was between 80 and 90 percent of the time. Out of the 126 participants, only one denied any mind-wandering at the sampled moments.

Prior work has also turned up average rates of 30 percent to 40 percent in everyday life.

"If you want to understand people's mental lives, this is a phenomenon we ought to be thinking about," Kane said.

Of course, a lot of mind-wandering is harmless, as when you think about a work problem while munching a cheeseburger. The problem comes when it distracts you from something you should be paying attention to.

The result of that can be tragic. Kane noted the 2003 case of a college professor who drove to work in Irvine, Calif., one hot August day, parked and went to his office. Whatever was going through his mind, he'd lost track of the fact that his 10-month-old son was in the back seat. The boy died in the heat. In 2004, virtually the same thing happened in Santa Ana, Calif.

A more common task that demands concentration is reading. Even here, people's minds wander 15 to 20 percent of the time, said Jonathan Schooler of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. And they often don't realize it, he said.

He and colleagues had college students read passages from "War and Peace" and other books. The volunteers pushed a button every time they noticed their thoughts straying, and that happened regularly, Schooler said.

But more surprisingly in such experiments, when the volunteers are interrupted at random times and asked what they're thinking, "we regularly catch people's minds wandering before they've noticed it themselves," Schooler said. And these stealth episodes appear to hamper reading comprehension, he said.

In Kane's study, scheduled for publication later this year, volunteers carried devices that beeped at random times and asked questions about their thoughts. Most of the time when caught mind-wandering, the students said they'd deliberately stopped focusing on what they were doing.

Their wandering thoughts trained more on everyday things than on fantasies, and much more than on worries. That's similar to what previous studies have found. "A lot of what they're reporting is ... mental to-do lists," Kane said.

But what leads to this?

"The mind is always trying to wander, every chance it gets," Schooler said. In his view, the mind has not only the goal of achieving whatever task we're focused on, but also personal goals simmering outside of our immediate awareness. These are things like making plans for the future, working out everyday problems, and better understanding oneself. Sometimes, one of these goals hijacks our attention. And so our mind wanders.

Brain-scanning evidence links mind-wandering to basic operation of the brain. Malia Mason of Harvard's Massachusetts General Hospital and colleagues recently reported that mind-wandering taps into the same circuitry that people use when they're told to do nothing — when their brains are on "idle."

Schooler, who's studying brain-wave activity associated with mind wandering, welcomes what he sees as a surge of interest in the topic. He and others say there's plenty to learn.

One goal is finding ways to help people realize when their mind is wandering and bring it under control, Schooler said. He plans to test whether meditation training might help.

But there's even a more basic question, he said. Why is the brain wired to wander? What could possibly be good about that?

"Mind-wandering is probably more often helpful than harmful," Kane said. For one thing, the cost is low: despite notable exceptions, life usually doesn't demand our full attention.

"A lot of human daily life is autopilot," he said. "There's a whole lot of what we need to do that we can do without thinking about it, from driving to eating .... We do occasionally miss that turn on the way home, but we get through the day pretty well."

Given that, a mechanism that encourages us to devote some idle brain capacity to planning and solving problems "seems like a pretty good use of time," he said.

Schooler is exploring the idea that mind-wandering promotes creativity. "It's unconstrained, it can go anywhere, which is sort of the perfect situation for creative thought," he said.

Mason points out that just because the human brain wanders doesn't necessarily mean there's a good reason for it. Maybe, she said, the mind wanders simply because it can.

But even she sees an upside.

"I can be stuck in my car in traffic and not go absolutely crazy because I'm not stuck in the here and now," she said. "I can think about what happened last night. And that's great."
Anyone else think this is interesting?
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Old 03-20-2007, 06:25 AM
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I do think it's interesting. I'm not sure it's "warrants a study" interesting, though.

I do know that I can't walk any great distances if I'm not thinking about something else. I mean, I can walk a long distance, obviously, but it seems like such an effort... Yeah, I am lazy that way.

Point is, if my mind is wondering, it's like, next thing I know, I've arrived at my destination.
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Old 03-20-2007, 08:45 PM
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My mind wanders all the time, but it doesn't mean that I'm not able to focus on things. I'm a college student, all I do is focus on information teachers and books are trying to cram into my head, and I can do it if I have to, even with things I'm really not interested in. I wouldn't compare the average mind wandering to parents leaving their children in the car, causing them to die. The majority of people would never do something like that, and it seems to me like if that's the case than the father wasn't fit to be a parent in the first place. If a lot of money is going to be spent on psychological research perhaps it should be spent on finding out causes of psychosis or cures for schizophrenia instead of solving the ever lingering problem of remembering where you put your keys last night.
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Old 03-21-2007, 11:48 AM
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Some people have problems focusing, it can be a light form of ADD.
Personally I've always been an extremly hyper person, I can't be still for five minutes, and I've had teachers asking me several times if I do have ADD. I've never checked it, actually. But the point is, I can still focus, actually I think school is fun and even the most boring subjects get interesting if you just concentrate.
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Old 03-22-2007, 06:09 AM
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Exactly. ADD is a well-known problem.

But, unless I wasn't paying enough attention while reading that article (and wouldn't that be ironic, huh? ), I do believe they're talking about a more general shortness of attention span problem.

Of which I am completely guilty, I know that much.
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Old 03-22-2007, 10:02 AM
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Yeah, I think it is. Like, right now as I type this, I'm not thinking about what I'm wiring but more of what I need to do today.
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Old 03-22-2007, 11:22 AM
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I'm pretty sure that most people probably wouldn't want to look inside my brain. I do believe it's possible for a person to not think. I day dream all the time and I might have an attention disorder but it doesn't affect me that much. However, I do zone out and day dream when I drive yet I've never had a wreck. Maybe, I have autopilot. LOL
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Old 03-22-2007, 03:28 PM
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Even when you zone out, you tend to think of something. There are only a few times when I have ever thought that I was not thinking anything and it just felt weird. Thought is just something you do without realizing, like breathing.
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Old 03-23-2007, 09:00 AM
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Well, I think you could 100% concentrate on one thing only for a short period of time. Then your thoughts automatically begin to wander, and you focus isn't only on the thing you're doing at the moment.

Happenings like the poor 10-month-old baby are very tragic, but I think people with such a brain wandering are very rare. Things like forgetting your keys or homework are common, they're not nice but you can live with it, as long as it doesn't happen everyday. Which it normally shouldn't.
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