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10 IQ Point Drop from Heavy Multitasking

Research finding from a 2024 study showing that heavy multitasking can lead to a temporary drop of up to 10 IQ points, a reduction greater than the effect of losing a night's sleep, highlighting severe cognitive costs of task switching.

Last updated: 2026-03-19 14:40

Overview

A 2024 study revealed a striking finding about the cognitive costs of multitasking: heavy multitasking can lead to a temporary drop of up to 10 IQ points. To put this in perspective, this reduction is greater than the effect of losing a full night's sleep, highlighting the severe impact of task switching on cognitive function.

The Research Finding

Core Discovery

What This Means

For context:

Context Switching vs. Multitasking

True Multitasking

The research shows only 2.5% of people—known as "supertaskers"—can genuinely multitask without performance degradation. For the remaining 97.5% of the population, what feels like multitasking is actually rapid task switching, with each transition exacting a cognitive penalty.

Rapid Task Switching

What we call "multitasking" is usually:

Comparison to Sleep Deprivation

Why This Comparison Matters

Most people recognize that losing a night's sleep impairs function:

The fact that heavy multitasking has a greater impact than sleep loss is particularly alarming because:

Cognitive Functions Affected

Executive Functions

The IQ drop particularly impacts:

Working Memory

Multitasking overloads:

Attention Control

Workplace Implications

High-Stakes Work

The IQ drop is particularly concerning for:

Daily Impact

Even routine work suffers:

Individual Variations

Factors Affecting Impact

Recovery

Temporary Nature

The good news:

Restoration

Cognitive function recovers through:

Practical Applications

Recognizing the Signs

You may be experiencing the IQ drop when:

Protection Strategies

Individual:

Organizational:

Related Research

Additional Findings

Measurement

While you can't directly measure your IQ drop, you can track:

2026 Context

Modern Challenges

The multitasking problem has intensified:

Emerging Solutions

Key Takeaway

The 10 IQ point drop from heavy multitasking represents a significant, measurable cognitive impairment that affects nearly everyone. While temporary, its workplace prevalence means many knowledge workers are operating significantly below their cognitive potential for large portions of their day. Understanding this cost is the first step toward protecting focus and maximizing cognitive performance.

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