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Deep Work_ Rules for focused success in a distracted world ( PDFDrive.com )

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This study, it turns out, is one of many that validate attention restoration theory<br />

(ART), which claims that spend<strong>in</strong>g time <strong>in</strong> nature can improve your ability to<br />

concentrate. This theory, which was first proposed <strong>in</strong> the 1980s by the University of<br />

Michigan psychologists Rachel Kaplan and Stephen Kaplan (the latter of which coauthored<br />

the 2008 study discussed here, along with Marc Berman and John Jonides),<br />

is based on the concept of attention fatigue. To concentrate requires what ART calls<br />

directed attention. This resource is f<strong>in</strong>ite: If you exhaust it, you’ll struggle to<br />

concentrate. (For our purposes, we can th<strong>in</strong>k of this resource as the same th<strong>in</strong>g as<br />

Baumeister’s limited willpower reserves we discussed <strong>in</strong> the <strong>in</strong>troduction to this<br />

rule. * ) The 2008 study argues that walk<strong>in</strong>g on busy city streets requires you to use<br />

directed attention, as you must navigate <strong>com</strong>plicated tasks like figur<strong>in</strong>g out when to<br />

cross a street to not get run over, or when to maneuver around the slow group of<br />

tourists block<strong>in</strong>g the sidewalk. After just fifty m<strong>in</strong>utes of this <strong>focused</strong> navigation, the<br />

subject’s store of directed attention was low.<br />

Walk<strong>in</strong>g through nature, by contrast, exposes you to what lead author Marc Berman<br />

calls “<strong>in</strong>herently fasc<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g stimuli,” us<strong>in</strong>g sunsets as an example. These stimuli<br />

“<strong>in</strong>voke attention modestly, allow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>focused</strong>-attention mechanisms a chance to<br />

replenish.” Put another way, when walk<strong>in</strong>g through nature, you’re freed from hav<strong>in</strong>g to<br />

direct your attention, as there are few challenges to navigate (like crowded street<br />

cross<strong>in</strong>gs), and experience enough <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g stimuli to keep your m<strong>in</strong>d sufficiently<br />

occupied to avoid the need to actively aim your attention. This state allows your<br />

directed attention resources time to replenish. After fifty m<strong>in</strong>utes of such<br />

replenishment, the subjects enjoyed a boost <strong>in</strong> their concentration.<br />

(You might, of course, argue that perhaps be<strong>in</strong>g outside watch<strong>in</strong>g a sunset puts<br />

people <strong>in</strong> a good mood, and be<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a good mood is what really helps per<strong>for</strong>mance on<br />

these tasks. But <strong>in</strong> a sadistic twist, the researchers debunked that hypothesis by<br />

repeat<strong>in</strong>g the experiment <strong>in</strong> the harsh Ann Arbor w<strong>in</strong>ter. Walk<strong>in</strong>g outside <strong>in</strong> brutal cold<br />

conditions didn’t put the subjects <strong>in</strong> a good mood, but they still ended up do<strong>in</strong>g better<br />

on concentration tasks.)<br />

What’s important to our purpose is observ<strong>in</strong>g that the implications of ART expand<br />

beyond the benefits of nature. The core mechanism of this theory is the idea that you<br />

can restore your ability to direct your attention if you give this activity a rest. Walk<strong>in</strong>g<br />

<strong>in</strong> nature provides such a mental respite, but so, too, can any number of relax<strong>in</strong>g<br />

activities so long as they provide similar “<strong>in</strong>herently fasc<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g stimuli” and freedom<br />

from directed concentration. Hav<strong>in</strong>g a casual conversation with a friend, listen<strong>in</strong>g to<br />

music while mak<strong>in</strong>g d<strong>in</strong>ner, play<strong>in</strong>g a game with your kids, go<strong>in</strong>g <strong>for</strong> a run—the types<br />

of activities that will fill your time <strong>in</strong> the even<strong>in</strong>g if you en<strong>for</strong>ce a work shutdown—

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