Arts, Literature

Set it free in the world

SIR RICHARD MAITLAND, who lived in the 16th century, was an eminent judge who became blind at the age of sixty-five.

Thinking he could no longer practise law, and not yet ready to retire from a productive life, he turned to the study of – of all things – literature.

He then went on to make a name for himself as a poet.

Now, the good judge may have needed someone to write his poems down, and he probably never saw one of them in print, but not being able to see the end result of his endeavours did not stop him adding to the world’s store of beauty.

Nor should it stop us.

Too often people hestitate to help because they can’t see how it will all work out in the end.

Don’t let that concern you. If you have beauty, kindness or even poetry to give, then set it free in the world.

It will take care of itself from there.

Standard
Science, Society

Can I learn to be better at multitasking?

MULTITASKING

Intro: It’s time to nail this myth once and for all – the scientific fact is that your brain is simply not wired for multitasking

WE make the mistake of thinking that our grey matter is like a computer – but try as we may, our conscious thinking powers cannot be split along separate paths in the way that a computer can run multiple programs simultaneously.

It takes between a few milliseconds to several minutes for the brain to fully orientate to a new task, depending on the task’s complexity. When we dart like a butterfly beween tasks, the vast majority of us end up not doing any of them well: we make more mistakes, and become less able to remember new things. By continually switching focus – and maybe buzzing on stress-induced adrenaline – we can be blind to how unproductive we’re being. Those who think they’re experts at multitasking are actually the worst at it, thanks to the Dunning-Kruger effect. This is the human curse of exaggerarting our own abilities and no one is immune. The only way to gain a realistic insight into your skills is to be independently assessed.

To work with, not against, your brain, prioritise tasks so you know what needs to get done first, cut those email notifications, and avoid starting a job until you’ve prepared what you need to complete it.

SUPERTASKERS

A plucky 2.5% of us take multitasking to the next level: these supertaskers are, for example, able to take charge of a hospital Accident & Emergency Department, and not be fazed by a ward full of patients in pain, a crowd of relatives clamouring for attention, and another ambulance due to arrive in the next five minutes.

Somehow, the decision-making cabling in the supertasker’s brain is able to fire with great efficiency – doing more work with less effort. Supertasker’s can filter out unwanted distractions, remember details easily, and stay as cool as a cucumber when under extreme pressure.

You might wish you were one of this elite breed, but it seems to be impossible to learn these skills – being a supertasker may simply be down to your genetic “dice” rolling a double six.

CONCENTRATION

Complimentary to this topic is the issue of concentration and scientists have been thorough in their research in addressing the oft quoted question, ‘Will listening to music improve my concentration?’

Listening to music certainly nudges the brain during tedious work, but it remains a myth that listening to classical music will make you smarter.

First coined in 1991, the “Mozart Effect” became a craze among parents and students after a series of short experiments showed that some students performed slightly better in certain types of tests when taken shortly after a music lesson or listening to classical music. Newspapers and the media loved the story, whipping up these findings into “listening to Mozart makes you smarter” – which was a bold stretch of the imagination.

Since then, further research has shown that while background music does give a slight boost to spatial reasoning (the ability to imagine and answer questions about 2D and 3D objects), it doesn’t improve your score in IQ or academic tests. Even then, the improvement doesn’t last long, and the music doesn’t even need to be classical – any pleasant background sound helps you stay focused, and lively pop and rock tunes tend to come out best of all. So if you are undertaking spatial reasoning tasks such as repairing a gadget, map-reading, or video gaming, put on your favourite upbeat track.

Standard
Arts

I will leave it to you

TESTIMONY

IT is generally thought that writing was developed as an aid to commerce. Like the letter sent to the merchant Ea-nasir in about 1750 BC, complaining about his inferior copper.

The tablet hardened over the centuries and the complaint is now engraved and etched in stone in the British Museum.

If the businessman who wrote the letter had known this would be how the world remembered him, might he have been tempted to write something else?

Most of our written communications tend to be electronic these days. Ephemeral. How about bucking that trend and writing something on paper or card a reader might think worth preserving?

I will leave it to you to decide which words you use, but I envisage and can only guess they won’t be complaining ones.

Standard