Can your brain only focus on one thing at a time?

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pensieve
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06 Dec 2010, 7:06 pm

Some people with ADHD can multi task but some can't concentrate on a single thing. people might think they have a lot of energy but jumping from one thing to another can be very frustrating. They are like us where we can't choose to block out information. But they usually don't see the details and we don't see the bigger picture.
This new type of ADHD in NT's is different because it doesn't impair them. I call it the new ADHD because it's not something that existed since birth but because the way society is so fast paced and information needs to be condensed to a 16 second commercial instead of 30. But NT's are not impaired by it. They still have social skills. They still have healthy communication between their frontal lobes and the rest of their brain. They have emotional regulation and such a short sensory memory it makes me sick just thinking about it. Umm, I read about the brain a lot...
I'm actually going to one day write a book about social networking and something called 'brain fog syndrome.' :wink: It's sci-fi.


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auntblabby
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06 Dec 2010, 10:47 pm

dr. lewis terman, in his studies of gifted people, found that they could indeed multitask effortlessly, unlike people of normal intelligence would could at best fluidly switch among tasks ["multithreading"] but could not truly multitask. so you have the gifted and the normal, and then there is me, who can do neither multitasking nor multithreading. but i'm a nice person at least.



Zen
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06 Dec 2010, 11:33 pm

pensieve wrote:
I'm actually going to one day write a book about social networking and something called 'brain fog syndrome.' :wink: It's sci-fi.


Sounds awesome. :D

I am the same way. I have been told that when I am drawing or painting, it's impossible to get my attention. Everything else just doesn't exist for me at that time. And if someone sends me a link to a youtube video and then continues to message me, I totally miss the video. I can't pay attention to both. In fact, I detest IM-ing and usually refuse to do it, because if I'm doing it, I can't do anything else and I feel like I waste all my time. Also, I can only really listen to music in the dark. Obviously, it's possible to play it in light; I just don't listen to it. XD



pgd
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08 Mar 2011, 10:36 am

pensieve wrote:
Some people with ADHD can multi task but some can't concentrate on a single thing. people might think they have a lot of energy but jumping from one thing to another can be very frustrating. They are like us where we can't choose to block out information. But they usually don't see the details and we don't see the bigger picture.
This new type of ADHD in NT's is different because it doesn't impair them. I call it the new ADHD because it's not something that existed since birth but because the way society is so fast paced and information needs to be condensed to a 16 second commercial instead of 30. But NT's are not impaired by it. They still have social skills. They still have healthy communication between their frontal lobes and the rest of their brain. They have emotional regulation and such a short sensory memory it makes me sick just thinking about it. Umm, I read about the brain a lot...
I'm actually going to one day write a book about social networking and something called 'brain fog syndrome.' :wink: It's sci-fi.


---

About Brain Fog

Cognitive dysfunction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cognitive dysfunction (or brain fog) is defined as unusually poor mental function, associated with confusion, forgetfulness and difficulty concentrating. ...
Postoperative Cognitive ... - Treatments - See also - References
http://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dysfunction - Cached - Similar

Words: Paying attention, memory, processing, sequencing, sustained attention, sustained memory, on track vs off track, ADHD Inattentive, petit/absence/TLE/complex partial, central auditory processing disorder, sports concussions, brain injuries, etc.



tasbro
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08 Mar 2011, 11:06 am

I can definitely relate to the OP. Especially the music part. I notice this more when watching a movie. I want to catch the entire movie, but have too many other things going on in real life and in my brain to concentrate. Alot of times I'll pause the movie and come back to it when I know I can concentrate on it better.



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08 Mar 2011, 11:12 am

Waitress here...I can handle my three tables and sundry other tasks, it's all part of one routine - but heaven help you if you step into my path while I'm single-mindedly charging ahead; or, worse yet, you're another server and you try to engage me in conversation. I may bite your head off just to get you to shut up and let me concentrate...I have no CPU space left for back-line joviality.


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OJani
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08 Mar 2011, 5:06 pm

Hmm. Today I had two interesting observation on myself. (I use to observe myself.)

1. Multitasking. While I'm usually unable to do this, this day I was having lunch, simultaniously doing a fairly mechanical task on the computer AND listening to a convarsation of my co-workers, even inserting some well-laied words. I had to concentrate this day on my work to counter sloppyness of the last few days. I suspect it also has something to do with the rare absence of the noise of a freakin' radio on all-day that I hate. I made a short check-list of the required tasks, that helped a lot, too, to boost concentration.

2. Problem with memory recall, the usual "I know the first letter of the name, but what's next?". A classic. The name of a tram-stop I could not figure out before it was revealed by the automated speaker.

(Generally I show signs of ADHD and NVLD too.)


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jmnixon95
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08 Mar 2011, 5:10 pm

I'm not good at consciously multitasking.



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08 Mar 2011, 6:15 pm

I can multitask with some things, but not another. Some things just take over my mind, and force everything else out. Sometimes, there is a thought or an idea or an interest which just demands my full attention, and no matter what I do, I cannot give my full attention to anything else until I have resolved it.

Conversation is a real problem for me. If I give my full attention to keeping up my side of a conversation, I don't have much left for things like eye contact and watching facial expressions.


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2ukenkerl
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08 Mar 2011, 8:57 pm

WOW, we have different ideas of multitasking and focus. I USED to be able to focus on several things at once, but now it is like my eyes. With my eyes, only my fovias can focus, but I STILL have peripheral vision. Likewise, I can't generally FOCUS on more than one thing at once, but I still multitask.



jamiethesilent
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09 Mar 2011, 2:13 am

I can focus only on one thinbg at a time. Unless I get distracted.


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Ahaseurus2000
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09 Mar 2011, 3:37 am

yes.

I try to "time slice" (got the idea from Win95 OS), keeping 2 simple maps of info in my head and switching between them when I have to manage two things at once. It's difficult.

I can do better if well-established muscle or procedural memory is involved and I have lots of experience (like with driving). But I cannot multitask well.

It's worse if i'm mentally distracted!


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necroluciferia
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09 Mar 2011, 4:14 am

I can't do more than one thing at a time. I can't work when there is music on, because I find it too distracting. If I try listening to music and reading then I will either focus on the book and not take in any of the music, or else focus on the music and not be able to take in what I am reading. Another thing, I can't have a conversation if there is any background noise.



silver22
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09 Mar 2011, 5:54 am

I find listening to classical music without lyrics helps me concentrate but music with lyrics severely limits my concentration as I focus on the words and nothing else.

I also have great difficulty focusing on conversation (either via phone or in person) when there is other noise around. I have very music orientated autistic traits so this is probably just another aspect of this. Multitasking in other areas does represent some difficulty but I can usually cope.



syrella
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09 Mar 2011, 7:33 am

Supposedly women are better able to multitask. I haven't found this to be true at all for me. The moment I try to multitask, it's like a battle begins and one task will ultimately win out over the other. Either that or I'll "short-circuit" and get no work done at all. I've had to remind myself to do simple things like chew my food when I get focused on or distracted by something interesting.


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09 Mar 2011, 12:16 pm

From appearances, yes, only one thing at a time.

But I don't know if that's what's really happening, both for me and for a lot of other people who think we're monochanneled.

What if the issue isn't that we can't multitask. But rather that for us, what other people call "one single thing" is actually six different things, that we use up all our multitasking ability on.

I don't know one way or the other but it's an interesting question.


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