Everything we do (thinking and doing) occupies some bandwidth. Some things occupy a little and others a lot.
Examples of things that occupy a little, for most people, are walking, drumming your fingers, or tapping your foot, and things that we are expert at because we have done them often. Examples of things that occupy a lot are talking, listening to information, doing anything we have to concentrate hard on, doing things that we are not expert in because we have not done them before.
Driving a car is a good way to envisage this. When we were learning to drive, we had to concentrate extremely hard. We would not have been able to hold a conversation while driving. Almost all our attention was involved in trying to drive. Now that we are an expert, we do not usually have to use so much of our attention. Of course, we still must use a fair amount, but we could also have a conversation while driving. But then, every now and then while we are driving along, something happens that means we have to focus more: the traffic increases, we come to a part of the journey where we have to look out for a turning, roadworks happen, the weather becomes difficult. Then we will find that we tend to stop conversation; we might turn the radio off; we have instinctively realised the need for more brain bandwidth for driving.
A few more interesting examples:
What is Mental Bandwidth (or Cognitive Bandwidth)?
Bandwidth is what allows us to reason, to focus, to learn new ideas, to make creative leaps and to resist our immediate impulses. Bandwidth refers to our cognitive capacity and our ability to pay attention, make good decisions, stick with our plans, and resist temptations.
Cognitive bandwidth is the maximum amount of thinking that is available per unit of time. It can be simplified a step further. We use the term ‘bandwidth’ to refer to two broad, related components of mental function:
Time Scarcity Vs Mental Bandwidth
Scarcity creates a powerful goal that inhibits other considerations. By constantly drawing us back to that urgent unmet goal, scarcity taxes our bandwidth and our most fundamental capacities. Busy people all make the same mistake: they assume they are short on time, which of course they are. But time is not their only scarce resource. They are also short on bandwidth. For instance, although the room seems quiet, it is full of disruptions—ones that come from within. Such internal disruptions stem from scarcity. An unrealized need can capture our attention and impede our ability to focus on other things.
The impacts of scarcity on mental bandwidth can be a vicious cycle. Feelings of scarcity, whether money or time, prey on the mind, thereby impairing decision-making. When we are busy, we are more likely to make poor time-management choices – taking on commitments we cannot handle, or prioritising trifling tasks over crucial ones. A vicious spiral kicks in, our feelings of busyness leave us even busier than before.
This scarcity mindset consumes ‘mental bandwidth’ — brainpower that would otherwise go to less pressing concerns, planning ahead and problem-solving.
This deprivation can lead to a life absorbed by preoccupations that impose ongoing cognitive deficits and reinforce self-defeating actions. When we focus heavily on one thing, there is just less mind to devote to other things. We call it tunnelling — as we devote more and more to dealing with scarcity we have less and less for other things in our life.
A Cognitive Bandwidth Formula
A simple
but different approach to cognitive bandwidth can be demonstrated by a formula
that we can all use to find mental balance:
1)
Throughput: The actual amount of thinking done per
unit of time…the throughput depends on the complexity of the stuff we are
working on.
2)
Overhead: Overhead is the cost of doing stuff where we must care about
organization, task switching, etc, and is paid against the bandwidth limit.
3) Bandwidth: The bandwidth is fixed at some level which we can barely change.
The idea is to try and always make sure our throughput and overhead do not exceed our perceived total bandwidth. If we know our overhead is going to be high one day, we can try to plan for a reduced throughput (and vice versa).
Why Is This Brain Bandwidth Theory So Relevant To Wellbeing, Stress & Performance?
1)
Stress and preoccupation. Three main disadvantages (among others) are:
a)
That we can have too much adrenalin and have a sense of
panic instead of simple alertness.
b)
Cortisol has a habit of building up and over time causing
problems with sleep, mental health, focus, mood, performance, and
physical illnesses.
c)
Preoccupation. This describes the fact that if our brain
bandwidth is occupied, then we have less available to focus on the task in
hand.
2)
Things that occupy a lot of bandwidth:
a)
Worries, anxieties, intrusive negative thoughts – if we are
worried about something or someone, it’s hard to focus on our work; we’ll make
more mistakes; and we’ll be snappier.
b)
Processing information or tasks – such as things we
are trying to learn, understand or remember
c) Anything new and
unfamiliar
d)
Other people being around us – they could be distracting us or
making us feel unrelaxed; other people are hard to ignore
e)
Working on screens – because when we are using a screen there is
almost always competing information on the screen, adverts and icons and notifications
designed to attract our attention away from what we are doing.
3)
The consequences of that:
a)
Exhaustion.
b)
Mistakes and forgetfulness – the times when we have “a lot on
our mind” are the times when we make mistakes.
c)
Loss of executive control –the times when we snap, say and do
things we don’t mean.
d)
Loss of cognitive ability – it is harder to learn new things if
we can’t devote our full attention.
Tips For Managing Our Mental Bandwidth
A) Ignore the Generic
Methods & Experiment
There are several conflicting philosophies. For instance, a penny saved might be a penny earned, yet we are also told not to be penny smart and pound foolish. The same holds true with advice for mental bandwidth, where one source might encourage multitasking, while another demand absolute singularity of focus. Rather than trying to adapt our working style to someone else's, experiment with different techniques and keep those that are functional for us, while casting aside those that do not.
B) Actively Manage
Our Mental Bandwidth
Perhaps the biggest mistake many people make is allowing their mental bandwidth to be managed for them. The beeping phone, meeting request, or act performed for ritual or obligation all rob our limited mental bandwidth, and many perform these actions unquestioningly. If we allocate our focus as we see fit, and actively choose what we want to focus on, we will be in command of our mental bandwidth.
C) Do A Bandwidth
Cost/Benefit
Most of us are awash in meeting requests and accept without question. Everyone complains about excessive meetings, yet it is often a guilty pleasure to summon a group at our whim, or join a discussion under the assumption that our input is necessary and valuable. Simply asking ourselves whether requesting or attending is worth the cost in mental bandwidth is a great start.
D) Plan For Focus
Time
There
are tasks that require great focus, whether performing precision or dangerous
manual work, or designing a complex system or bit of code. Or, we may need to
spend some time with a small group, free from distraction. Book a block in the
calendar, shut off the phone, move to a different physical location, or do
whatever is required to create the right circumstances to have the necessary
focus to get the job done.
E) Know When To
Throw In The Towel
For many of us it can be tempting to put in the extra hour at the office, or delay vacations for what is perceived as a critical set of meetings or deadlines. Trying to squeeze out the last ounce of mental bandwidth can be tempting in the moment, but it is ultimately an effort with rapidly diminishing returns. Calling it a night, taking that long-delayed vacation, or even the simple act of a quick walk around the office will recharge our mental energy and make us more effective in the long run.
F)
Don't Make Assumptions About Our Team
It
can be tempting to assume that what works for us will be effective for others,
even to the point of designing our physical spaces and policies around what we
assume will allow our team to best manage and deploy their mental bandwidth.
Rather than assuming, ask the team how we can help them be most effective. Allow
the teams to experiment and find what works for them, and use the end result as
the benchmark for success.
Content Curated By: Dr Shoury Kuttappa
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