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Ever Works

# Cognitive Science

30 items

2.5% Supertaskers Statistic

Research finding showing only 2.5% of people are 'supertaskers' who can genuinely multitask without performance degradation. For the remaining 97.5% of the population, multitasking is actually rapid task switching with cognitive penalties.

40-Second Microbreak Study

Research demonstrating that microbreaks as brief as 40 seconds are sufficient to improve attention and task performance, providing a minimal yet effective intervention for maintaining concentration during sustained cognitive work.

Attention Residue

Cognitive phenomenon where attention remains partially focused on previous task after switching, reducing performance on new task. Understanding this explains productivity costs of multitasking and context switching.

Attention Residue Concept

Scientific concept describing the cognitive switching cost when shifting attention between tasks. Research by Dr. Sophie Leroy shows that our minds continue processing previous tasks even after switching, reducing performance on new tasks by up to 40%.

Attention Residue Effect

Cognitive phenomenon identified by researcher Sophie Leroy in 2009 where part of our attention remains focused on a previous task even after switching to a new one. This residue impairs performance on the current task, with studies showing it takes an average of 23 minutes to fully regain focus after distractions. The ready-to-resume plan technique can mitigate this effect.

Attention Residue Management

Productivity practice based on minimizing the cognitive cost of task switching. Attention residue refers to the portion of your attention that remains focused on a previous task when switching to a new one, reducing performance on the current task.

Attention Residue Phenomenon

The cognitive effect where switching tasks leaves residual attention from the original task, reducing performance on the new task for a non-trivial amount of time. Critical concept for understanding context-switching costs.

Attention Restoration Theory Breaks

Evidence-based break strategy using natural environment exposure to recover from directed attention fatigue and restore cognitive capacity for improved focus and productivity.

Cognitive Load-Aware Scheduling

Time management approach that schedules tasks based on their cognitive complexity and element interactivity, matching high-load work to peak mental capacity periods while protecting cognitive resources.

Cognitive Switching Penalty

Mental cost incurred when switching attention between tasks, consuming time and energy as the brain loads and reloads contexts, reducing productivity by up to 40% according to research.

Completion Bias

A cognitive bias where people feel compelled to finish tasks once started, often prioritizing easy-to-complete tasks over more important ones. Understanding this bias helps optimize productivity by balancing the dopamine reward of completion with strategic task prioritization.

Context Switching 40% Productivity Loss

Research from the American Psychological Association demonstrating that context switching between tasks can lead to a 40% decrease in productivity due to the mental lag involved in refocusing, providing the scientific basis for time batching and monotasking methodologies.

Context Switching Awareness

Practice of recognizing and minimizing the productivity costs of task switching, which consumes up to 40% of productive time and takes 23 minutes to recover from each interruption.

Context Switching Cost Analysis

Time management practice of measuring and minimizing the productivity penalty from task switching. Research from American Psychological Association shows context switching reduces productivity by 40%, with 23 minutes average refocus time after each distraction. Core principle behind task batching methodologies.

Context Switching Cost Awareness

Productivity practice of understanding and minimizing the hidden time and cognitive costs incurred when switching between tasks, projects, or types of work throughout the day.

Context Switching Cost Research

Body of research quantifying the productivity cost of task switching, showing a $450 billion annual economic impact and 23-minute recovery time, providing scientific evidence for the value of focused work and time blocking methodologies.

Context Switching Penalty

Cognitive cost incurred when switching between different tasks or projects, including attention residue, ramp-up time, and reduced performance. Research shows switching can cost 20-40% of productive time.

Context Switching Reduction

Time management practice focused on minimizing the cognitive cost of switching between different tasks, projects, or tools to maintain productivity and mental clarity throughout the workday.

Context Switching Research

Scientific research demonstrating that task-switching costs up to 40% of productive time, with workers requiring an average of 23 minutes to fully refocus after interruptions. Studies show knowledge workers toggle between applications 1,200 times per day, costing an estimated $450 billion annually in lost productivity in the US alone.

Context Switching Research Findings

Comprehensive research demonstrating that frequent task-switching costs up to 40% of productive time and can temporarily reduce IQ by 10 points. Studies show it takes an average of 25 minutes to refocus after interruptions, making context switching one of the primary productivity killers in modern workplaces.

Decision Fatigue

Deteriorating quality of decisions after a long session of decision-making. Understanding this explains why routines, habits, and decision-reducing systems improve productivity and willpower conservation.

Deep Work Method

Productivity philosophy developed by Cal Newport emphasizing focused, distraction-free work sessions to produce high-quality output, contrasting with shallow work and constant connectivity.

Four-Hour Daily Deep Work Limit

Research-backed finding that most people cannot sustain more than four hours of genuine deep work per day, with 2-3 hours being the realistic average for maintaining cognitive performance without burnout.

Micro-Breaks Study 2026

Recent research from February 2026 published in Frontiers in Psychology demonstrating that micro-breaks between study sessions significantly improve university students' learning concentration, with findings that short breaks (30 seconds to 5 minutes) disrupt resource-depleting cognitive cycles.

Single-Tasking (Monotasking)

A productivity practice of focusing on one task at a time rather than multitasking, based on cognitive science research showing that sequential task completion is more efficient and produces higher quality work than task switching.

Task Resumption Lag

The mental reboot time required to gather focus and resources to return to an original task after an interruption, involving an underlying memory retrieval process that can take from minutes to over 20 minutes depending on task complexity.

Task Switching Cost

The cognitive and productivity cost incurred when shifting attention between different tasks, resulting in an average of 23 minutes to regain focus and up to 40% reduction in productivity due to attention residue and mental context switching.

Temporal Discounting

Cognitive bias where future rewards are valued less than immediate ones, scientifically linked to procrastination and poor time management, with implications for productivity interventions.

Time Perception Distortion

The phenomenon where subjective experience of time's passage differs dramatically from objective clock time, influenced by factors like flow states, dopamine levels, mental engagement, and arousal. Understanding these mechanisms helps optimize work scheduling and task management for maximum productivity and wellbeing.

Zeigarnik Effect

A psychological phenomenon where people remember incomplete or interrupted tasks better than completed ones, which can be leveraged for productivity or cause mental burden from unfinished work.