PodClips Logo
PodClips Logo
Huberman Lab
AMA #11: Improve Task Switching & Productivity and Brain Fog
AMA #11: Improve Task Switching & Productivity and Brain Fog

AMA #11: Improve Task Switching & Productivity and Brain Fog

Huberman LabGo to Podcast Page

Andrew Huberman
·
14 Clips
·
Sep 29, 2023
Listen to Clips & Top Moments
Episode Summary
Episode Transcript
0:00
Welcome to the huberman live podcast where we discuss science and science based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew huberman. And I'm a professor of neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford school of medicine.
0:15
Today is an ask me, anything
0:17
episode or AMA. This is
0:19
part of our premium subscriber Channel. Our premium subscriber channel was started in order to provide support for this standard huberman Lab podcast which comes out every Monday and is available.
0:30
At zero cost to everybody on all
0:32
standard feeds YouTube, Apple Spotify and
0:34
elsewhere. We also started the premium channel as a way to generate support for exciting research, being done at Stanford and elsewhere. Research on human beings that leads to important, discoveries, that assist mental health, physical, health, and performance. I'm also pleased to inform you that for every dollar the huberman lab premium channel generates for research studies, the tiny Foundation has agreed to match that amount. So now we are able to double the total amount of funding given to
1:00
Is of mental health, physical
1:01
health, and human performance. If you'd like to subscribe to the
1:04
human Lab podcast premium channel, please go to huberman, labs.com. Premium it is $10 a month to subscribe or you can pay $100 all at once to get an entire 12 month subscription for a year, we also have a lifetime subscription model that is a one-time payment. And again, you can find that option at
1:22
huberman lab.com premium
1:24
for those of you that are already subscribers to the premium channel, please go to huberman, labs.com, /
1:29
Mm and download the premium subscription feed. And for those of you that are not
1:33
huberman, Lab podcast, premium subscribers, you
1:36
can still hear the first 20 minutes of today's episode and determine whether or not becoming a premium subscriber is for you. So, without further Ado, let's get to answering your questions. The first question is about task switching and the specific question is, is
1:51
there a way to get better at task switching?
1:55
Well, task switching is an incredibly interesting topic.
1:58
It's something that
2:00
Plagues many people. That is a lot of people have challenges with task-switching.
2:04
It's also a topic that people will often confuse with cognitive
2:08
flexibility. So all of us, well, unless it's been removed, have an area of our
2:14
brain called the prefrontal cortex. The words prefrontal cortex actually refers to fairly varied real
2:21
estate within the human brain. So it's not one area of the human brain. Prefrontal cortex actually includes a lot of different
2:26
subdivisions that do different things in the context of
2:29
Ignition
2:30
and directing action with holding action, these kinds of things. But one of the main functions of the prefrontal cortex, is that when it's
2:37
working? Well, it allows us to direct
2:40
our focus and our cognition, our thinking in a context-dependent way. So one of the simplest ways to describe this is that when you took math in high school, if you're still taking math, your brain had to carry out certain types of cognitive operations that were very different than the types of cognitive operations that you need to carry out.
2:59
In your history class or your social studies class.
3:02
But there were some features of all three of those
3:05
classes that were the same. In the sense, that presumably you have to sit in a chair for all of those classes, you followed a certain set of rules that pertain to all three of those different classes even though they're different subjects. But
3:17
then there were certain rules
3:18
that pertain just to mathematics certain rules that you followed. Because of particular teacher was strict. Not because of the topic they were covering as well as certain rules. That maybe you did not pay attention to because a different teacher.
3:29
ER was a little more lakhs. For instance, maybe there was a teacher, let you put
3:32
your feet up on the chair in front of you. Maybe another
3:34
teacher forbid that at all costs.
3:37
The point being that your prefrontal cortex is the area of your brain that along with other areas of your brain. Ensures that you engage in context,
3:46
specific behavior context, specific thinking and context, specific understanding about what you should and should not do
3:55
now. Cognitive flexibility is similar in the sense that it describes your
4:00
He to switch the types of cognitive operations as the name suggests, depending on what
4:06
sorts of things you're trying to learn or understand. And
4:08
it's a lot more extensive than that. In fact, we will probably do an
4:10
entire episode all about both cognitive flexibility and perhaps even a separate episode on task
4:15
switching, but task switching is somewhat
4:17
distinct from cognitive flexibility. First of all,
4:20
task-switching requires
4:21
cognitive flexibility, but they are not the same thing. Now, when we talk about task switching or rather, when you see task-switching in the scientific,
4:29
Err,
4:30
most often it has to do with people performing, one
4:34
particular type of mental or physical operation which say they are. They're maneuvering things with their hands or other parts of their body
4:43
or they are required to carry out one specific
4:45
type of mental process. And then they are required, either
4:51
at random intervals or at specific intervals maybe every 10 minutes or so to switch
4:56
their attention and to do a different task
4:58
entirely. Now in the
4:59
Laboratory experiment situation. This is most typically been
5:03
carried out the following way. People are going to do one cognitive tasks, maybe mathematics or they're going to count for instance from 1 up to Infinity as high as they can go in a given amount
5:17
of time in increments of say 7
5:20
or increments of 7 plus 1. Then 7, minus 1. So these can be made increasingly difficult, you get the idea and then
5:28
perhaps a tone is played or they'll get
5:29
get a signal from the experimenter and then they need to
5:31
switch their task to doing something quite different. But also cognitive, that's the most typical Arrangement or another typical arrangement in a task switching experiment. Is that the subject? The person in the task-switching experiment
5:44
will be asked to do some sort of physical manipulation of objects. Maybe placement of puzzle
5:49
pieces, into the correct configuration then at some designated interval or intervals.
5:55
They will have to switch to a different manual tasks.
5:59
You were not 0, but fewer experiments have examined task, switching between physical
6:05
and cognitive tasks. Okay. Now, there are these kind of outrageous examples that you can find on the internet. And by the way, I don't suggest that anyone go engaging these examples in real life of kind of extreme
6:16
task-switching, one of the most notable ones would
6:19
be chessboxing believe. You're not this exists where two people will enter a ring and they will sit down at a
6:25
table and they will play chess
6:28
for a given period of time.
6:29
So they're entirely focused on playing chess, then a buzzer will go off
6:33
the chest table. We clear the chairs will be cleared, and
6:36
they will be expected to box literally fight for around of say, a minute to three minutes and then go back to chest. Then the boxing so-called chessboxing again. I'm not suggesting people chest box, but I know that many people have challenges with task switching and here I can raise my hand and say that I am one such person. I've always had a pretty good ability to
6:59
Up into deep focus
7:01
after a period of time. You know, I like everybody else takes a little bit time to get into a book chapter or two, get into a mode of physical exercise. But once I'm doing
7:10
something, I tend to be very, very focused
7:12
on that. And I have a much greater challenge in switching out of that focused mode to doing the next thing which is one of the reasons why I often times I run tardy because I'm still mentally thinking about or physically engaged in the thing that I was doing before this is something I'm constantly working on and as
7:28
a consequence I've had to seek out and
7:29
Meant
7:30
certain tools to improve my ability to tasks which so I'm going to share a few of those tools with you now because I know a number of people probably struggle with the same
7:37
thing. And as I mentioned earlier, I'm also going to
7:41
do a full-length episode about task switching, both the underlying mechanisms of task-switching, as well as a more extensive list of tools related to task switching as a full-length huberman Lab podcast episode. So how can we get better at task switching? Well, short of having somebody scruffy by the neck and force you to stop whatever activity you're doing and engage.
7:59
The next activity that you're doing, one of the best things that we can do to support our
8:04
ability to switch. That's nicely supported both at the mechanistic level, and at the Practical level within the published literature
8:12
is to introduce short
8:14
transition gaps between the activities that we're trying to switch between. This is something that in my opinion has not been discussed enough. In fact, when was the last time you heard about
8:23
the requirement for
8:25
introducing gaps between tasks if you want to
8:27
switch between them more efficiently and yet,
8:29
As a consequence of this not being
8:31
discussed very often. I think a lot of people have placed an undue burden on themselves.
8:35
For instance, a lot of people think that when you sit down with a book and you're going to read
8:40
that, you should be able to immediately
8:43
focus on the material that you're reading and
8:45
not have your mind flitting
8:46
about during the first five, maybe even 10 minutes of reading a book chapter unless you are
8:52
absolutely enthralled from the first
8:55
word or you are intensely curious.
9:00
What the material
9:01
in that book chapter is, right? Maybe that book chapter is about you and what's going to happen to you next in your life. Maybe the news article is about something that you care. Oh, so much about but
9:09
unless it's one of those specific instances it's going to be about 5 or 10 minutes before the neural circuits in your brain that are required to understand and digest and commit that material to memory are going to come online at the levels of
9:24
activity that are going to be required for you to experience that as intense.
9:29
Has or even as
9:30
mild Focus. Because the activity of the brain is always going to be in a push-pull, this is extremely important for understanding task. Switching, when you go from one task, and maybe the
9:41
task was simply to walk over to where the book is
9:43
located to focusing on the material within that book. You have to both engage activity within certain neural circuits and you need to disengage the activity of other neural circuits. Now sometimes this is
9:57
referred to as
9:57
inhibition of certain neural circuits. Other
9:59
Times. It's just going to be a dissipation of activity of those neural circuits. They're just going to quiet down
10:04
like a dimming of the lights
10:05
in a particular room while the
10:07
activity of other neural circuits increases, okay? So the first thing that you really need to understand, if you want to get better at task, switching is that you cannot and you should not expect yourself to immediately drop into a narrow trench of focus or a narrow trench of ability for anything that you're not already extremely skilled at or
10:26
extremely interested in knowing, okay?
10:29
One of the reasons why this is often overlooked is that, for instance, if we receive a text message from somebody and we are very interested in what's contained in that text message, maybe even eagerly anticipating the dot-dot-dot you know in that little window where the text message is going to arrive. Like here it comes, here it comes, here it comes. It's an example of where you are able to immediately pay attention and absorb information. For instance, if you're trying to meet somebody in a big city and you need to know exactly where to meet them and you've arrived at the place where you thought you needed.
10:59
To be in, then you can't find them in your waiting waiting. Where are you, where are you? And, you know, you're going to commit that information to memory and you're going to act
11:05
on it. When you sit down to read a book of unknown
11:08
content or where you have just a general sense of what the content is, or when you sit down to do something like, work on a spreadsheet or your taxes or engage in a conversation with somebody expect a 5 to 10-minute transition, period, I can't emphasize this enough because I think a lot of people mistakenly think that they have
11:25
issues with attention and perhaps, indeed, they have clinically diagnosed
11:29
Possible attention deficit hyperactivity disorder or some other form of attention, deficit disorder, certainly can't rule that out based on this conversation alone
11:38
but a lot of people place this unfair burden on themselves
11:43
to immediately be able to focus on a given task and this is also true for physical
11:48
tasks, right? If you go to the gym to work out or you're heading out on a run
11:53
or cycling Expedition,
11:56
the idea that you would immediately be able to cycle at your Peak,
11:59
Performance or that you
12:01
could perform sets and Reps in the gym and as best as you possibly could without any warm up, without any transition period that you could forget about the difficult, or maybe even great conversation that you were having on the way in or that you can forget about other
12:13
activities that you need to do in the rest of your day.
12:16
I mean, that's just completely unfair and it doesn't
12:19
match at all the way that your neural circuits
12:22
work. So you really need to match your expectation of your ability to focus on and perform a given
12:28
task. Whether or not it's cognitive or physical.
12:29
Vehicle to the actual underlying biology. Okay, so that's the first point.
12:33
The second point is that we know that if you want to switch from one task to another task, that you are making it more difficult to drop into full
12:46
task engagement, or rather engagement with task be following tasks. A, if you
12:52
try and go immediately from
12:53
task a task, be
12:55
that even the introduction, I find this. So cool. Even the introduction.
12:59
Of an arbitrary but very short transition period of say 15 seconds. Where you know, that you're introducing 15 seconds of transition and you designate it as transition will allow you to engage in a more efficient and more complete level of task execution on task B. If you introduce even a brief transition period.
13:22
Now
13:23
this I find fascinating because what this means is that there are top-down influences, there are literally things that we can
13:29
tell
13:29
Ourselves based on an understanding of the underlying mechanisms that allow us to test which better. And the certainly doesn't involve taking any kind of prescription drug or supplement or doing anything
13:40
differently. Except as you go from
13:43
task a to task be
13:46
knowing and designating that a transition period, even a very brief one where you are not trying to perform tasks be and that you've designated this as a transition
13:55
period. I'm not
13:57
trying to focus on the next thing that I need to.
13:59
My
14:00
focus on it inadvertently but I'm not deliberately trying to focus on it. Rather I'm going to think about what I just did and the fact that I'm no longer doing that kind of leaving it, like a
14:11
fog behind. All right, you're trying to move from this deep trench of attention, hopefully, on task a, or maybe you
14:16
didn't achieve a deep trench of attention and you're now done with task a and you're not placing this unfair expectation on your neural circuits to just flip to task B and you're also acknowledging that
14:29
Task. B is going to take 5
14:31
to 10 minutes to drop into fully. We already talked about that but you're going to shorten that 5 to 10 minutes
14:37
by deliberately introducing, a transition period and what comes in that
14:41
transition period and its duration is important. So first, let's deal with the duration. How long should the transition period be?
14:49
Well, that is going to scale directly with how long you were
14:53
in a deep trench of focus for task a but
14:55
let's assume task a was something that was kind of light for you. Maybe you're just handling some
14:59
Maybe you're talking to a co-worker maybe you were at a board meeting and it was kind
15:04
of light, you know, the stuff was just okay that you're used to this stuff. This is stuff that you do all the time. Now you're headed back to your desk your head, you to your next class or perhaps you did work out that morning and now you're going to head to your work place of work,
15:17
or maybe you're leaving work, and you're going to engage with family. And, you know, you need to switch all these cognitive operations. You need to dump the stuff that you were just doing
15:26
cognitively, and you now need to do a bunch of other things.
15:29
Context is switching. Tasks is switching.
15:33
Well, just ask yourself. How Deeply was I entrenched in that. Other activity
15:37
was my mind flitting to other
15:39
things. Or if I was in a deep trench of
15:42
attention for that given thing.
15:44
Well, then you should give yourself slightly
15:46
longer for this transition period. Maybe five, or even ten minutes if you have that time.
15:51
But even if you give yourself a short as 60 to 90 seconds of
15:55
transition and you just doesn't designate, excuse me, as transition, you're going to benefit.
15:59
Terms of your ability to do the next task.
16:01
So to be very clear if you were in kind of a light task or something that didn't have much cognitive demand. Well then, the transition period can be fairly short.
16:09
It can be just a couple of minutes, rather, if you were in a deep trench of attention, you really engage in that first task,
16:17
I suggest giving yourself a couple of
16:19
minutes or more. Maybe as much as five to 10
16:21
minutes, but you might not have that much time in which case give yourself any kind of transition. Even if it's 10 seconds, right? I certainly have had times in my life.
16:29
Particular, when I was a new
16:30
assistant professor meaning, before I got tenure, where I
16:34
remember sitting down to work on a grand, I get two lines out, someone would knock on the
16:37
door, where are the whatever,
16:39
the 30 ml syringe is, where do we
16:40
keep the buffers? Or, you know, where's the, you know, did we get this thing into? Okay and then I have to shift my attention, I go back to writing and then be, you know, distracted by something else again which is not to say that people were distracting me. Unfairly, it was simply the case that at that time, my life required being involved in a lot more things than it did. As my career progressed, at least
16:59
In the short term. So
17:02
the point being that if you are deeply engaged in activity, give yourself a little bit longer in
17:06
the transition period between them. If you are
17:09
sort of superficially involved in an activity, you need less of a transition period but you need a transition period. What should come during that transition? Period.
17:16
Well, the
17:17
most important thing to arrive in that transition period is a
17:21
relative lack of attention to anything new.
17:24
This is what so destructive about the phone and keep in mind,
17:27
I am not one of these people. That thinks that
17:29
Smartphones are terrible. In fact, I use mine
17:32
plural. Very often all day often, not necessarily during deep cognitive Focus, but in between those bouts of focus, I have to text message people, I do work on their, I'm on social media, so certainly not demonizing
17:46
the smartphone. However,
17:48
if you finish a given activity, whether or not it's cognitive or physical activity, and you are headed to something else that requires
17:54
you to do a new task. And that, that task requires
17:59
Significant amount of attention and focus.
18:02
Well, then you would do very well to allow yourself a period of anywhere from 2 minutes to maybe as long as ten minutes. I know there's gonna be very hard for people, but two minutes to As Long As 10 minutes where you are
18:13
not looking at your phone, you're not texting.
18:16
You're not on social
18:17
media, you're not foraging for anything. In fact, you're trying to limit the total amount of information that you're bringing into your nervous system. Now, you don't have to walk around with eyes closed and try not here and not see. Let's be practical folks. That's impossible to do.
18:29
Anyway, can't shut down your brain while awake. You can go into states of deeper relaxation. There's a non sleep deep rest which we'll talk about in a little bit
18:38
but
18:39
you can't shut off your brain deliberately. Okay, not in any healthy way, that is.
18:43
But by introducing these transition
18:46
zones or transition periods as we'll call them
18:49
of 2 to 10 minutes, between different tasks and making sure that within those transition periods, you are not bringing in new information again another context and what do you really do?
18:59
Well you're ensuring that you're not going from task
19:01
a to task B to task C,
19:04
right? What we're talking about here is trying to limit your task switching
19:08
between tasks a and task B and not introducing, another task in
19:12
between. And you might think that looking at your phone, is
19:15
not a task, right? It's so easy, it's so
19:17
reflexive, but it is, it's bringing in a lot of new
19:21
context in particular, pictures and movies, which are tremendous stimulus for the nervous system and anchoring your
19:26
attention. It's bringing in new ideas, new thoughts,
19:29
So that no
19:30
matter how hard you try are going to intrude into your ability to perform tasks be. So when people
19:37
say, how do I get better at task-switching?
19:39
I immediately want to say,
19:41
please don't introduce yet, more tasks. Right.
19:43
Switching from one task to another is hard enough already. Don't introduce another task in between.
19:48
Now, some of you might take this to mean
19:50
that you shouldn't have a conversation with a co-worker after a meeting while walking down the hall. I'm not saying that I still encourage people to be social. I encourage people to engage
19:59
Jin, workplace environments. However, I will say after many years of working in Laboratories that, at times were quite large, and you walk into the lab and there's a
20:07
lot of different things going on. One of the things that you learn how to do, if
20:10
you're going to get good at your
20:12
craft, is to not pay attention to what's going on with everyone. Crowded around a computer looking at like who's
20:18
winning at the World Cup. I'm not trying to insult soccer players here. I enjoy soccer both playing it and observing it,
20:23
but one has to sort of scruff themselves, a little bit and trying to limit
20:29
Their attention to a number of different things in the
20:31
environment and really go from task a to task, be in a really dedicated way.
20:36
Shortlists benefit certain people, I know a lot of people are list makers out there. They like to put two or three things, or maybe 20
20:43
things that they're going to accomplish
20:44
each day. One of the best tools that I ever learned both for
20:48
sake of task-switching, but also for sake of just getting things done on a consistent basis, I picked up while I was a master's student at Berkeley, a
20:55
very accomplished professor at that time told me that
20:58
he writes down.
20:59
Every day three things that he's going to accomplish an only three things, never more than three, now
21:05
he also included other activities. In fact, he was quite active in his physical life. So he rode his bike to
21:11
campus, he also was a runner. He also went to the gym. He did not include those on his list of three things, but he would write down no more than three critical things to do each day. So he had three critical
21:21
tasks so I've employed that method as well. I'll write down
21:25
one sometimes two most often three but if I can just
21:29
at one or two
21:29
tasks that I need to complete each day
21:32
and everything else is considered. Part of
21:34
the, let's just say automaticity function of my day
21:37
things that I already know how to do. They don't require a ton of
21:40
cognitive Focus but I limited things that require a lot of cognitive Focus to three things per day. However, those three things per day can take up many, many hours each and certainly on the
21:49
whole. Okay, now there are additional things that one can do to improve your ability to task switching. One of the things that I found particularly beneficial is not a meditation but rather
21:58
is a perceptual.
21:59
Our size and this is a perceptual exercise that I
22:02
learned about when I was a graduate
22:03
student, but in a totally different context and it has to do with the way that your visual
22:07
system, and the parts of your brain that parse time are related to one another and influence one. Another.
22:14
Now, the reason this tool makes sense for improving your ability tasks, which is because turns out that where you focus, your visual attention, strongly influences, the way that your brain
22:25
parses time, so
22:27
I'll describe the tool first and then I'll get a
22:29
A bit into the underlying mechanisms but again I'll get deep into the underlying
22:33
mechanisms as well as the tool as well as additional Tools in a future episode about task switching on the huberman Lab podcast.
22:40
So if you were to, for instance, close your
22:44
eyes and not look at anything in your external environment
22:49
and just concentrate, for
22:50
instance, on your breathing or the feeling on the surface of your skin. I know this is starting to sound like meditation but trust me it's not meditation.
22:57
Your perception of time that is
22:59
How finely you are? Slicing time would be distinctly different. Then if you were to open your
23:06
eyes and focus on a Faraway location, say way off in the horizon.
23:11
And not focus on your bodily Sensations.
23:14
Similarly if you were to focus your attention on some
23:18
intermediate location. Maybe let's say 20 feet away
23:21
and simultaneously focus on your internal
23:26
bodily Sensations or the surface of your skin,
23:28
your perception of time. How quickly time was passing. Would
23:33
also be different than if you close your eyes, or if you were looking at some distant location. So, the
23:39
perceptual tool for
23:41
Switching is a very simple one, it's one that frankly I do every morning and have for many years.
23:45
Now, at least for me, has really enhanced my ability to test, which
23:50
and that is to just take a couple of minutes. And this really only
23:52
takes about two or three minutes. And
23:55
typically, what I will do is I'll start by closing my eyes. Oh, I should mention I typically do this in an
24:00
environment where ideally I can see off into the distance, perhaps From A Balcony if I'm an apartment or house ideally Outdoors, but if I'm indoors I'll still do this. I'll just look as
24:11
Far off into the distance as I can, when that step is required. So, but I
24:15
start off by closing my eyes and especially not looking at anything but directing my brains
24:20
Focus to either the surface of my body. Just what it feels like. What it's in contact with or not in contact with maybe my breathing.
24:26
Then I'll open my eyes and I will focus on some location on my
24:30
body. But my bodily surface, like my hand at some distance.
24:34
And I'll Focus my attention there maybe for just
24:37
5 to 15 seconds. I should mention that the first station as I call them, where my eyes were closed and I was focusing, my bodily Sensations. I also just do that for about 5 to 15 seconds, and I don't count specifically. I'm just kind of rough roughly 5 to 15
24:51
seconds. Okay, so second station you're looking at the surface of your hand and if you like, you can also concentrate on your
24:57
breathing. But typically people just focus on some specific location on their hand. Then I'll typically lower my
25:03
And then I'll look off into the distance. Maybe five to ten feet doesn't really matter Focus. My visual attention
25:09
there. Try and hold that Focus for 5 to 15 seconds. Then I'll look further off in the distance, maybe
25:15
further still off into the distance. Ultimately, what I try and do is look at a
25:19
location as far off in the distance, into the distance, scuse me, as I possibly
25:24
can. And I'm also
25:25
trying to pay attention my breathing at the same time,
25:28
just as a way of calibrating my location.
25:32
To the location that I'm looking at and how great that is.
25:34
Then, typically, I'll close my eyes and return my attention to my immediate
25:37
environment, and my breathing just in the location. I'm in
25:41
a. So, the entire thing only takes about two minutes again. Starting
25:45
with eyes closed, focusing on self 5 to 15 seconds, then eyes open, focusing on surface of one's body. That is focusing, one's visual attention 5 to 15 seconds,
25:54
maybe 10 feet away, then maybe 50
25:57
feet away. If you're in the metric system. OK, M folks works just as well.
26:01
These distances do not have to be precise and then off to the Horizon and then back to one's immediate location by closing one's eyes. Now, what is happening when one does this perceptual
26:13
exercise? And again it's a
26:14
perceptual Exodus of visual perceptual exercise.
26:17
Well what's happening is you are shifting your
26:21
visual Focus, obviously,
26:23
but you're also Shifting the way in
26:25
which you find slice or thick slice time now your ability to
26:30
recognize
26:31
Honestly, whether or not you're thin slicing or thick,
26:33
slicing time is
26:35
much harder to get a grasp of then it is to get a
26:38
grasp of whether or not you're looking at your hand or often the distance that's kind of obvious.
26:42
But what we know for sure is that as you shift your attention from your immediate environment out to different designated
26:47
locations, in your environment and your
26:49
time perception shifts. Accordingly, your essentially training your brain, to shift visual focus and the way in which you process in the time domain. And this is important in the context of
27:00
task switching because
27:01
So much of task-switching is not just to understand. Okay, I'm going from Reading to running or from running to reading
27:11
and the different types of operations that are required in one case versus the other.
27:16
But also a shift in the neural circuits that
27:19
underlie your perception of time.
27:22
And again this is a topic that deserves a much more elaborate discussion. But so much of our ability to execute a
27:29
task with high proficiency,
27:31
in C has to do with getting
27:33
our thinking, and our actions into the correct time domain. Now, when I say time domain, I know a number of people can get confused because
27:41
time is time, right? People think how, what do you mean by time
27:44
domain space domain make
27:45
sense? Here, I'm not sure about outer space whether or not you're looking in one location or another close to your body or far away from your body or different domains of space.
27:55
But the time domain is a little trickier for most people to understand. So, just think of it this way when you see a slow,
28:01
In movie. What you're seeing is a movie that was shot at a high frame rate, many frames per
28:06
second. Okay, the typical smartphone shoots movies at about 60 frames per second. Some older ones 30 frames per second. The
28:13
slow-mo function on your smartphone is actually a high frame rate
28:20
function, you took the same movie, but you took it at higher frame rates. You got a lot
28:25
more images,
28:26
therefore you can generate
28:27
slow motion. So with your visual system when you focus very close in,
28:31
To your body or you're focused on bodily, Sensations in your immediate environment,
28:36
you are fine. Slicing in the time, domain more so
28:41
than when you are looking further off in the distance,
28:44
similarly, when you engage in one type of tasks, like a board
28:47
meeting or a zoom meeting or conversation
28:49
with friends, you are in a very different set of neural circuit
28:53
functions than when you sit down to read or learn math, or lift weights, or go to therapy or go for a walk with your
29:01
Ugh, for instance, now it should be clear. Why when you move from task a to task B, you want to a introduce? The transition period can be very
29:11
brief, maybe you don't even have time for the two-minute transition period. You just say, okay, I'm in a transition period, between tasks and task. Be a moving from this thing to
29:19
that thing, I just need like 10 seconds. I'm going to recognize I'm going to count down 10 to 1 or 1 up to 10, doesn't matter. This is transition time but this is not a time to look at my phone or
29:31
To be in lots of different time domains.
29:33
Now, you might say, well does that mean I shouldn't look at the Horizon while I'm
29:38
walking from my meeting back to my desk. No no, no, that's
29:41
not the way that your brain works. It doesn't anchor two things. That
29:44
just happen to be in your environment unless they're a particular interest. What I'm saying is set a transition period between tasks ideally to maybe as long as 10 minutes.
29:54
I'm also saying that when you switch between tasks or when you initiate your first major task of the day, please expect do expect
30:04
a period in, which
30:05
it's hard to get into the groove, so to speak.
30:09
And in addition to that, I recommend having some sort of practice and I describe the practice that I've used
30:14
for some period of time. Now, at least for me to great success
30:18
where you are, deliberately shifting your visual attention between different locations, close to you and far away.
30:24
And you're doing that as a perceptual
30:25
practice. Again, the whole thing only takes about two minutes, maybe three minutes, and you don't even need to do it every day. I happen to do it every day, but I miss the occasional day here and there, and even if you were to do this perceptual practice, you know,
30:38
once a week or three times a week, I'm certain that you'll benefit because in doing that perceptual practice, there's also an immediate recognition of the sorts of shifts that your brain is required to engage, in any time
30:49
you move from task, a task, b, or from task B to test see and you start
30:53
to
30:54
See, and feel literally, see and feel the way that that transition occurs, and that it takes a little bit of time, but that you can accelerate that
31:03
transition. If you understand that. Oh, when I'm
31:05
looking here and engaging in this type of
31:08
behavior or sets of tasks, and then, I'm now going to be expected to another
31:13
task in a completely different type of environment that the brain is going to be required to shift over the neural circuits that are active and less
31:21
active in order to do that. But that you can
31:24
Rate that process by practicing it using that perceptual tool that I
31:27
described. So there I covered some
31:29
specific tools that one can use to enhance one's ability to tasks
31:32
which touching on a bit of the underlying
31:34
neurobiology and why transition periods are useful if not required. If you think about,
31:40
there's always a transition period when task switching, but here you're taking
31:43
conscious control over that transition
31:45
period. There are additional tools
31:47
for enhancing one's ability to task
31:49
which they tend to be somewhat specific for the certain kinds of cognitive.
31:54
Or physical tasks
31:55
that one needs to do.
31:56
The example of chessboxing that I gave earlier great example of task switching at its extreme.
32:01
Terrible example of a
32:02
practice space time, bridging very
32:04
safe. I can't think of any way in which it might be dangerous. Although please don't do it while driving or while operating in any kind
32:10
of other Machinery. But
32:12
by all accounts, very safe zero cost and we talked about some of the other tools for task switching as well.
32:17
Thank you for joining for the
32:18
beginning of this. Ask me anything episode to hear the full episode and to hear future.
32:24
Of these ask me anything
32:25
sessions plus to receive transcripts of them and transcripts of the human Lab podcast, standard Channel and premium tools. Not released anywhere else. Please go to huberman.
32:35
Lab.com premium,
32:37
just to remind you why we launched the
32:38
huberman Lab podcast, premium channel, its really
32:41
twofold. First of all, it's to raise support for the standard huberman Lab
32:44
podcast Channel, which of course will
32:47
still be continued to be released every Monday in full length, we are not going to change the format or anything
32:52
about the
32:54
huberman Lab
32:54
podcast and to fund research in particular research done on human beings. So not animal models, but on human
33:01
beings, which I think we all agree is a species that we are most interested in and
33:06
we are going to specifically fund research. That is aimed toward developing further, protocols for mental health, physical health, and performance. And those protocols will be distributed through all channels, not just the premium channel,
33:17
but through all channels, human Lab podcast and other media
33:19
channels. So the idea here is to give you information to your burning questions.
33:24
In depth and allow you the opportunity to support the kind of research that provides those kinds of answers in the first place. Now, in, especially exciting feature of the premium channel is that the tiny Foundation has generously offered to do a dollar for dollar match on all funds raised for research through the premium
33:40
channel. So this is a
33:42
terrific way that they're going to amplify whatever funds come in through the premium channel, to further support research for Science
33:48
and science related tools for mental health, physical, health and performance. If you'd like to
33:52
sign up for the humor in lab premium channel.
33:54
Again, there's a cost of
33:55
$10 per month or you can pay one hundred dollars up front for the entire year. That will give you access to all
34:00
the amas. You can ask questions and get answers to your questions and you'll, of course, get
34:05
answers to all the questions that other people ask as well. There will
34:08
also be some premium content such as transcripts of the amas and various transcripts and Protocols of huberman Lab podcast, episodes not found elsewhere. And again, you'll be supporting research for mental health, physical health, and performance. You can sign up for the premium channel by going to
34:24
In lab.com
34:25
/p meum again. That's huberman. Lab.com / premium and as always thank you for your interest in science.
ms