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Scientists find clutter affects ability to focus, process information

#1
Scientists find physical clutter negatively affects your ability to focus, process information

“... When your environment is cluttered, the chaos restricts your ability to focus. The clutter also limits your brain’s ability to process information. Clutter makes you distracted and unable to process information as well as you do in an uncluttered, organized, and serene environment.”

Interactions of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Mechanisms in Human Visual Cortex

Abstract: Multiple stimuli present in the visual field at the same time compete for neural representation by mutually suppressing their evoked activity throughout visual cortex, providing a neural correlate for the limited processing capacity of the visual system. Competitive interactions among stimuli can be counteracted by top-down, goal-directed mechanisms such as attention, and by bottom-up, stimulus-driven mechanisms. Because these two processes cooperate in everyday life to bias processing toward behaviorally relevant or particularly salient stimuli, it has proven difficult to study interactions between top-down and bottom-up mechanisms. Here, we used an experimental paradigm in which we first isolated the effects of a bottom-up influence on neural competition by parametrically varying the degree of perceptual grouping in displays that were not attended. Second, we probed the effects of directed attention on the competitive interactions induced with the parametric design. We found that the amount of attentional modulation varied linearly with the degree of competition left unresolved by bottom-up processes, such that attentional modulation was greatest when neural competition was little influenced by bottom-up mechanisms and smallest when competition was strongly influenced by bottom-up mechanisms. These findings suggest that the strength of attentional modulation in the visual system is constrained by the degree to which competitive interactions have been resolved by bottom-up processes related to the segmentation of scenes into candidate objects.
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#2
Thumbs up for this post, I promote this.

Every unnecessary object has some impact and will possibly waste your time.

Damn I had one kid here saying "candy candy candy" here today... and probably will until I'll get to Japan Big Grin
Edited: 2011-03-29, 6:55 pm
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#3
Interesting. To be honest, I don't really buy into this. I love clutter, organized chaos is my room in a nutshell. Yet I have no problems focusing at all.
If I'm getting distracted by stuff around me, that isn't the stuff's fault. My attention would wander regardless of whether or not there was anything around, it's just a way to give an excuse for why you aren't focusing.
Well, I suppose this just shows that everyone is different.
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JapanesePod101
#4
You know what the most cluttered environment is?

The internet.
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#5
I'm a poster child for this. I'm constantly resizing windows so that they stack neatly on top of each other, otherwise I find it distracting.

A helpful shortcut on OS X to limit distraction is Cmd-Alt-click dock icon to hide all windows but the one you're working with.

Another neat shortcut is when you have the Application switching popup (holding down Cmd after pressing Cmd-Tab), you can press H to hide the applications. Lets you quikcly tab through open apps and hide the ones that clutter the desktop.

By the way I think this is a very important feature of the tablet format, and possibly why it is easier to use for children and older people (as is widely reported with the iPad). Essentially you have apps running in fullscreen mode all the time. This is great.

Coincidentally Apple is bringing more fullscreen modes into the next major OS X update (OS X Lion).

Maybe we are beginning to realize that multi tasking is a myth, and doesn't make us happy.
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#6
ファブリス Wrote:I'm a poster child for this. I'm constantly resizing windows so that they stack neatly on top of each other, otherwise I find it distracting.

A helpful shortcut on OS X to limit distraction is Cmd-Alt-click dock icon to hide all windows but the one you're working with.

Another neat shortcut is when you have the Application switching popup (holding down Cmd after pressing Cmd-Tab), you can press H to hide the applications. Lets you quikcly tab through open apps and hide the ones that clutter the desktop.

By the way I think this is a very important feature of the tablet format, and possibly why it is easier to use for children and older people (as is widely reported with the iPad). Essentially you have apps running in fullscreen mode all the time. This is great.

Coincidentally Apple is bringing more fullscreen modes into the next major OS X update (OS X Lion).

Maybe we are beginning to realize that multi tasking is a myth, and doesn't make us happy.
Oh cool, I didn't think of that. I usually just use other options like Win + M (Windows). For Windows 7 you can either grab the active window by the title bar and shake it with the mouse, or hit Win + Home keys (to minimize all but active).

http://www.labnol.org/software/minimize-...ckly/9985/
Edited: 2011-03-30, 6:06 am
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#7
I'll have to try that. I really like the Win+cursor keys and snapping to edges in Windows 7.
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#8
ファブリス Wrote:I'll have to try that. I really like the Win+cursor keys and snapping to edges in Windows 7.
Ohh nice, I was just wishing there was a hotkey for snapping to the sides.
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#9
ファブリス Wrote:Maybe we are beginning to realize that multi tasking is a myth, and doesn't make us happy.
Thank's for this video, it's great!
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