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Una década de datos revela que las personas que realizan muchas tareas al mismo tiempo tienen memoria reducida, El psicólogo de Stanford dice

Los teléfonos inteligentes que ahora son omnipresentes estaban ganando popularidad cuando Anthony Wagner se interesó en la investigación de su colega de Stanford., clifford nass, sobre los efectos de la multitarea y la memoria de medios pesados. Aunque Wagner, a professor of psychology at Stanford University and director of the Stanford Memory Laboratory, wasn’t convinced by the early data, he recommended some cognitive tests for Nass to use in subsequent experiments. Mas que 11 años después, Wagner was intrigued enough to write a review on past research findings, publicado en procedimientos de la Academia Nacional de Ciencias, and contribute some of his own.

Woman holding phone in one hand, tablet in another, at a laptop computer.

A decade’s worth of research has shown that people who frequently use many types of media at once performed significantly worse on simple memory tasks. (Credito de imagen: imágenes falsas)

los papel, co-authored with neuroscientist Melina Uncapher of the University of California, San Francisco, summarizes a decade’s worth of research on the relationship between media multitasking and various domains of cognition, including working memory and attention. In doing that analysis, Wagner noticed a trend emerging in the literature: People who frequently use many types of media at once, or heavy media multitaskers, performed significantly worse on simple memory tasks.

Wagner spoke with Stanford Report to explain the findings from his review on media multitasking and cognition, and discuss why it’s premature to determine the impact of these results.

 

How did you become interested in researching media multitasking and memory?

I was brought into a collaboration with Cliff Nass, a Stanford faculty member in communication who passed away a few years ago, and his master’s student, Eyal Ophir. They had this question: With the explosion of media technologies that has resulted in there being multiple simultaneous channels available that we can switch between, how might this relate to human cognition? Eyal and Cliff would come chat with me about their early findings and – I have to say – I thought it was complete hooey. I was skeptical. Pero, after a few experiments, the data were increasingly pointing to a link between media multitasking and attention. Their findings struck me as potentially important given the way we’re living as humans in this attention economy. Years later, as a memory scientist my interests continued to grow. Given that attention and cognitive control are so fundamental for memory, I wanted to see if there was a relationship between media multitasking and memory.

 

How do you define media multitasking, and can you give hypothetical examples of people that would be “heavy” and “light” media multitaskers?

Bien, we don’t multitask. We task switch. The word “multitasking” implies that you can do two or more things at once, but in reality our brains only allow us to do one thing at a time and we have to switch back and forth.

Heavy media multitaskers have many media channels open at once and they switch between them. A heavy media multitasker might be writing an academic paper on their laptop, occasionally checking the Stanford basketball game on TV, responding to texts and Facebook messages, then getting back to writing – but then an email pops up and they check it. A light media multitasker would only be writing the academic paper or may only switch between a couple of media. They may turn off Wi-Fi, put away their phone or change their settings so they only get notified every hour. Those are some extreme examples, but they provide a sense of how people differ in their media use. Además, because our media landscape has continued to accelerate and change, those who are considered a heavy or light media multitasker today may not be the same as those a decade ago.

 

How do scientists assess someone’s memory?

There are many forms of memory, and thus many ways of probing memory in the lab. For working memory – the ability to keep a limited amount of information active in mind – we often use simple short-delay memory tasks. Por ejemplo, in one test we show a set of oriented blue rectangles, then remove them from the screen and ask the subject to retain that information in mind. Luego les mostraremos otro conjunto de rectángulos y preguntar si alguno ha cambiado la orientación. Para medir la capacidad de memoria, hacemos esta tarea con un número diferente de rectángulos y determinar cómo los cambios de rendimiento con el aumento de las cargas de memoria. Para medir la capacidad de filtrar la distracción, A veces se añade distractores, como rectángulos rojos que los sujetos se les dice a ignorar.

 

¿Qué tendencias en general ¿se fijaron cuando estaban buscando a través de la literatura para escribir esta crítica?

En aproximadamente la mitad de los estudios, los medios de comunicación múltiples tareas pesadas son significativamente más bajo rendimiento en tareas de memoria de trabajo y atención sostenida. La otra mitad son resultados nulos; no hay diferencia significativa. Me parece bastante claro que existe una relación negativa entre los medios de comunicación multitarea y rendimiento de la memoria - que la multitarea de alta medios se asocia a peor rendimiento en tareas de memoria cognitiva. There’s not a single published paper that shows a significant positive relationship between working memory capacity and multitasking.

In the review we noticed an interesting potential emerging story. One possibility is that reduced working memory occurs in heavy media multitaskers because they have a higher probability of experiencing lapses of attention. When demands are low, they underperform. Pero, when the task demands are high, such as when the working memory tasks are harder, there’s no difference between the heavy and light media multitaskers. This observation, combined with the negative relationship between multitasking and performance on sustained attention tasks, prompted us to start looking at intrasubject variability and moment-to-moment fluctuations in a person’s ability to use task goals to direct attention in a sustained manner.

How do these findings affect how people should engage with media, or should they at all?

I would never tell anyone that the data unambiguously show that media multitasking causes a change in attention and memory. That would be premature. It’s too early to definitively determine cause and effect.

One could choose to be cautious, sin embargo. Many of us have felt like our technology and media are controlling us – that email chime or text tone demands our attention. But we can control that by adopting approaches that minimize habitual multitasking; we can decide to be more thoughtful and reflective users of media.

dicho esto, multitasking isn’t efficient. We know there are costs of task switching. So that might be an argument to do less media multitasking – at least when working on a project that matters academically or professionally. If you’re multitasking while doing something significant, like an academic paper or work project, you’ll be slower to complete it and you might be less successful.


Fuente:

news.stanford.edu, by SOFIE BATES

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