Value The Mindless Tasks In Your Life

Mindless tasks that allow our thoughts to roam can be catalysts for innovation, writes Tom Jacobs on the Pacific Standard website:

“That’s the conclusion of a research team led by Benjamin Baird and Jonathan Schooler of the University of California, Santa Barbara’s META Lab (which focuses on Memory, Emotion, Thought and Awareness). Their research, published in the journal Psychological Science, suggests putting a difficult problem in the back of your mind won’t, by itself, lead to creative thinking. The key seems to be performing some simple chore while it’s lodged there.

Baird and his colleagues describe an experiment featuring 135 people, ages 19 to 35. Their creativity was measured by performance on the classic Unusual Uses Task, in which each participant is given two minutes to come up with as many uses as possible for a specific item, such as a brick. Besides the sheer number of responses, their answers are judged on originality, flexibility, and level of detail.

All the participants began by tackling two such problems. One-quarter of them then spent 12 minutes on an intellectually demanding task, which demanded constant attention. Another quarter spent that same amount of time on an undemanding task, which only required them to provide “infrequent responses.” Another quarter was instructed to rest for 12 minutes, while the rest went directly to the next task without a break.

All then tackled four additional rounds of the Unusual Uses Task. Two were repeats of the tests they performed earlier, and two featured objects that were new to them.

Those who had performed the undemanding task in the interim had significantly higher scores than those in any of the other categories (including the people who had simply rested for 12 minutes). However, this jump in creativity occurred only for the items they were tackling for a second time. They did not score any better than the others when presented with a new object.

This suggests their success in coming up with creative solutions ‘resulted from an incubation process’ which was ‘characterized by high levels of mind wandering,’ the researchers write. Having had a chance to mull over the first two objects they were presented with (thanks to the relatively mindless task they performed in the interim), they came up with more creative ideas when given the opportunity to revisit them.

The researchers can’t be sure why, but they point to neuroimaging studies that suggest that, while the mind is wandering, several different brain networks interact. They speculate that this ‘relatively rare’ state may enhance creative thinking.

But why did those stuck with a boring task do better than those who had simply rested for 12 minutes? It’s impossible to say for certain, but being free to think about anything, their minds presumably drifted somewhere else entirely—perhaps to a pleasant (or challenging) subject that occupied their entire attention.

So if you’re an aspiring songwriter or a poet with a day job waiting tables, you may be in luck. So long as the restaurant isn’t ridiculously busy, you have placed yourself in a situation that facilitates creative thinking.” Read more here.

As a working mother who rarely has time to “simply rest,” I love the idea that mindless tasks facilitate creative thought—and in fact I do tend to come up with ideas for my writing while doing tasks like cooking or folding laundry. I wonder too if we tend to be more relaxed when we’re somewhat (but not completely) occupied—it’s a rather soothing state to be in, while truly having nothing to do can be enervating.

One Response to “Value The Mindless Tasks In Your Life”

  1. You’re exactly right. I get good ideas when I’m driving to school, traveling the same route that I’ve driven for many years. Mowing the lawn also works as I just go in straight lines time after time.
    Thanks for an insightful post.

Leave a Reply

Sign up for The Brilliant Report, a monthly newsletter full of the latest findings on how to learn smarter:

Close