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CHI
2011
ACM

Initial results from a study of the effects of meditation on multitasking performance

12 years 8 months ago
Initial results from a study of the effects of meditation on multitasking performance
This paper reports initial results from a study exploring whether training in meditation or relaxation can improve office workers’ ability to multitask on a computer more effectively and/or with less stress. Human resource (HR) personnel were given 8 weeks of training in either mindfulness meditation or body relaxation techniques, and were given a stressful multitasking test both before and after training. (A third group, a control group, received no intervention during the 8-week period but was tested both before and after this period.) Results indicate that overall task time and errors did not differ significantly among the three groups. However, the meditation group reported lower levels of stress and showed better memory for the tasks they had performed; they also switched tasks less often and remained focused on tasks longer. Keywords Multitasking, meditation, human attention, information overload, stress, knowledge workers, attention training. ACM Classification Keywords
David M. Levy, Jacob O. Wobbrock, Alfred W. Kaszni
Added 25 Aug 2011
Updated 25 Aug 2011
Type Journal
Year 2011
Where CHI
Authors David M. Levy, Jacob O. Wobbrock, Alfred W. Kaszniak, Marilyn Ostergren
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