PERSONAL SPECIAL The Real (and Imaginary) Benefits of Multitasking
If your idea of
multitasking is watching a football game on television while texting your
friends on your smartphone and checking email on your tablet, you’re not alone.
In today’s technology-driven world, multitasking is an integral and necessary
part of life. But are you really getting anything done effectively when you try
to do many things at once? New research from Wharton marketing professor Rom Schrift and doctoral student Shalena Srna shows that
multitasking is a mere illusion because it is impossible to execute more than
one task at a time. Nevertheless, the perception of multitasking seems to be
beneficial to performance. Schrift and Srna, who authored the paper, “The
Illusion of Multitasking and Its Positive Effect on Performance,” with Yale marketing professor Gal Zauberman, shared
their observations with Knowledge@Wharton.
An edited transcript of the
conversation follows.
Knowledge@Wharton: What was the inspiration for this research?
Rom Schrift: The thing that ignited our interest in studying
this topic was the apparent contrast between how people generally define
multitasking and how they actually engage in it. Specifically, although
multitasking is generally defined as engaging in multiple tasks concurrently,
previous research has repeatedly demonstrated that humans do not actually
attend to multiple tasks at the same time. That is, when we think we multitask,
we actually switch rapidly back and forth between tasks and do not attend to
more than a single task at a time. This means that multitasking is often
nothing more than a perception or even an illusion.
Shalena Srna: In many instances, people can perceive the exact
same activity as either multitasking or single-tasking. For example, when I am
in a meeting, I might perceive my activity to be a single task, but I am
actually both listening to Rom and taking notes. When I shop at a store and
look up sales information on my phone, am I engaging in single-tasking or
multitasking? Am I just shopping or am I simultaneously browsing the clothes
racks and finding deals online? These situations ignited our interest in the
malleability of multitasking perceptions and how the mere illusion of
multitasking might impact enjoyment, engagement and performance on the tasks.
Knowledge@Wharton: The research notes that most people have a positive view
of multitasking, but many studies have shown that multitasking isn’t usually
the most efficient way to get things done. What challenges does that create in
helping people become more productive?
Srna: Indeed, we find that people would like to be
perceived as adept multitaskers and believe they are actually good at it. In a
sample representative of the U.S. population, 93% of respondents indicated they
could multitask better or as well as the average person. Given that many
studies had documented that multitasking is detrimental to performance, this
could potentially pose a problem as people may not be aware of the extent to
which multitasking can hinder their performance on many tasks. However, our
results suggest that given that a person engages in some form of multitasking,
acknowledging that they are indeed multitasking could at least help mitigate
the detrimental consequences of multitasking.
Knowledge@Wharton: What were the most surprising findings of this study?
Schrift: The most surprising finding of this study is that,
first, multitasking is often a matter of perception. That is, individuals can
perceive the same activity as either multitasking or single-tasking depending
on the context. For example, imagine that you are watching two live football
games on the sports channel and both games are broadcasted simultaneously on a
split screen. Will you consider this activity as multitasking or
single-tasking? Will thinking about your activity more broadly as “watching
sports” or more specifically as “watching two live games” change your
perception? If you watch one game on TV and the other on your iPad
simultaneously, does that change whether or not you perceive yourself as
multitasking or single-tasking? Indeed, we find that these and many other
factors change our multitasking perceptions and have important consequences for
our engagement and attentiveness.
Srna: The second surprising finding is that, although
engaging in multiple activities is harmful to performance compared with
engaging in a single task, the mere perception of multitasking is beneficial to
performance. That is, holding constant the activity that individuals actually
engage in, making such activity feel like multitasking improves both
persistence and performance on the task.
Knowledge@Wharton: What is the key takeaway of this study?
Schrift: Although previous literature found that engaging in
multiple tasks may diminish performance, we find that, holding the activity
constant, the mere perception of multitasking actually increases engagement
with the task and improves performance. Thus, regardless of whether or not
people engage in a single or multiple tasks, making individuals perceive this
activity as multitasking is beneficial to performance.
Knowledge@Wharton: What implications does this paper have for managers? Does
it bring to light any techniques managers should be using to get the most
productivity out of their employees?
Srna: This work has a number of managerial implications.
Many jobs require people to engage in multiple tasks concurrently. The extent
to which people feel like they are multitasking may help them attend more to
the activity at hand.
Schrift: Because almost any task may be decomposed to its
smaller, more basic components, managers may find it useful to highlight the
multitasking nature of the activity. For example, in one of the studies we
asked people to transcribe a certain video clip. Most people perceive such an
activity — transcribing — as a single task. However, for one of the groups we
made it salient to individuals that transcribing involves two tasks that should
be done concurrently, namely, listening and typing at the same time. What we
find is that individuals in this group, who perceived the activity as
multitasking, performed better on the task (i.e., typed more words) and also on
a follow-up task that tested their comprehension of what they typed.
Knowledge@Wharton: What sets this research apart from other analysis
conducted on the topic?
Schrift: To the best of our knowledge, this research is the
first to examine the malleability of multitasking perceptions as well as how
these perceptions impact performance. While other analyses conducted on this
topic examined how asking individuals to do more hurts performance, we hold the
activity constant and focus on the mere effect of multitasking perceptions.
Knowledge@Wharton: How do you plan to follow up this research?
Srna: We are currently in the process of examining a
number of areas related to this research. First, we are examining when people
choose to multitask and how this informs their preference for products that
enable them to multitask (like an iPad). We are also examining people’s
preference for products that do things simultaneously (e.g., face wash that
simultaneously cleans and moisturizes your face). Finally, we are exploring
people’s enjoyment and engagement with advertising and media when they perceive
the activity they are engaging in as multitasking versus single-tasking
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/real-imaginary-benefits-multitasking/?utm_source=kw_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2018-01-02
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