Multitasking: Let’s Tame (Not Kill) the Beast

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Is the discourse about multitasking falling into the fallacy of the excluded middle?

Could it be that, instead of a stark choice between the frantic pursuit of getting more done in less time at one extreme or demonizing multitasking at the other end of the spectrum, there is a worthy but relatively unexplored middle, where we could learn to deploy an appropriate level of intention to appropriate media at the appropriate time?

Or is multitasking unequivocally the mental equivalent of bingeing, an addiction to fragmentation, a seductive waste of mind that we should discard, a habit that all decent people should eschew and discourage?

Contemporary discussion about this topic, buttressed by a growing body of empirical evidence, seems to favor the view that people today, and particularly those darn kids, are driven to distraction, attracted by flashy and superficial media gimmickry, hypnotized and addicted, fragmented and disordered.

But I wonder if something valuable is to be found in the deep gulf between the frenetic and the hyper-focused?

Don’t get me wrong—I’m alarmed at the way people are texting while walking or even driving. I face university students in my classes on a regular basis who are gazing at their laptops while I or another student talks. As far as I can tell, these screen-tropic students might be taking notes—or they might be rallying their guild in World of Warcraft or changing their Facebook status to “It’s complicated.”

[Monica Lewinsky sees light beyond the darkness of cyberbullying.]

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In fact, when I realized that my students didn’t know what they looked like from my point of view, I made a short video of them and posted it online, with their permission. When I showed them the video in class, I had a camera capturing their reactions—from the back of the classroom. While I was showing the students’ behavior to the same students on the big screen at the front of the classroom, my assistant zoomed in on the screen of one student who, for reasons I don’t understand, decided to watch the same video on his own computer. Then he surfed to my personal website and quickly scrolled the page up and down. Then he went back to checking his e-mail.

But here is what got me thinking: the particular student captured on this video was one of the most attentive and thoughtful students I’ve taught. His grade in that class was a rare A+. Does he know how to do something that others don’t know?

I explore a number of attention probes with my students. Sometimes, I open the first class meeting by asking them to turn off their phones, shut their laptops, and close their eyes for a minute. Sometimes, only the two students who co-teach with me that week keep their laptops open. Sometimes, 20 percent of the class can have their laptops open. Always, I direct them to pay attention to where their attention is going when their laptops are open or the phones in their pockets buzz. So I’m not ignoring the lack of mindfulness associated with my students’—and my own—use of all the screens of various sizes in our lives.

So I think it’s worth asking whether we can learn to use our digital mind amplifiers more effectively. Without a doubt, digital media are encouraging attention to go wild. But what if it could be tamed? Taming wild attention is the center of Buddhist practice, and recent books have delved into the application of Buddhist practices to mindfulness in contemporary life. I’m inquiring into the possibility of bringing similar practices to life online. While there are ample reasons to consider the healthy alternative of spending time offline, for many—more each day—cyberspace is where we learn and work.

One of the courses I teach is Digital Journalism, where I confront the issue relevant to all of us who dwell in the always-on milieu—the need to balance the quantity of information at our fingertips with the quality of information we actually receive. For a journalist, this is not just a personal need but a professional duty. To this end, I’ve been instructing students in a combination of mental discipline and technical skills that I call “Infotention.”

The point is this: We are in charge of the information we pay attention to, but if we don’t actively construct, tune, and manage our own filters, the raw flow of info, misinfo, and disinfo around us will take over. It’s up to each consumer of information to make personal decisions about what to pay attention to and what to ignore. That decision-making is a mental process that all humans have always deployed in the world, but the world that we evolved in through pre-digital eons has been hyper-accelerated recently through our use of the media we’ve created. We need, therefore, to attune those native attention filters to our contemporary needs. And to those who know how to use them, tools are widely available, free of charge, on the Web to help us with this task. Journalists and others can readily set up dashboards and radars that tune in only streams of information we really want.

[Museums need to transform themselves in this digital era. But how? A former director of the Met has ideas.]

But such filtering takes a conscious effort to cultivate the infotentional skill. Is this e-mail, tweet, URL, blog post, video link really worth my immediate attention, or should I bookmark and tag it for later retrieval? Becoming mindful of these decisions is a way of gaining control over the multitasking impulse.

Clearly, neuroscientists and cognitive scientists are providing important clues to the dangers (and even possible benefits) of multitasking and whether we can learn to deploy our attention more effectively through practice. I’m not yet prepared to argue that multitasking athletes actually exist or whether their prowess is congenital or self-taught. But we owe it to ourselves not to close the door prematurely on new ways to use our mind’s best tools.

This essay was originally published in 2018 in Encyclopædia Britannica Anniversary Edition: 250 Years of Excellence (1768–2018).

Howard Lee Rheingold