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'Wandering minds' make people unhappy: study

By dsorbello at Nov. 19, 2010, 5:46 a.m., 17287 hits

AFP - Friday, November 12SendIM StoryPrint.

WASHINGTON (AFP) - – A US study out Thursday suggests that people spend about half of their time thinking about being somewhere else, or doing something other than what they are doing, and this perpetual act of mind-wandering makes them unhappy.

“A human mind is a wandering mind, and a wandering mind is an unhappy mind,” wrote psychologists Matthew Killingsworth and Daniel Gilbert of Harvard University in the journal Science.

“The ability to think about what is not happening is a cognitive achievement that comes at an emotional cost.”

The study tracked 2,250 people via the trendy iPhone gadgets using an application, or app, that contacted volunteers at “random intervals to ask how happy they were, what they were currently doing, and whether they were thinking about their current activity or something else that was pleasant, neutral or unpleasant.”

When the results were tallied, people had answered that their minds were wandering 46.9 percent of the time.

Subjects reported being happiest while having sex, exercising or having a conversation. They reported being least happy while using a home computer, resting or working.

By examining the mind-wandering responses, researchers found that “only 4.6 percent of a person's happiness in a given moment was attributable to the specific activity he or she was doing, whereas a person's mind-wandering status accounted for about 10.8 percent of his or her happiness.”

The study said “time-lag analyses” suggested that “subjects' mind-wandering was generally the cause, not the consequence, of their unhappiness.”

Subjects tended to be most focused on the present, and least prone to mind-wandering, during sex, the study noted. During every other activity, minds were wandering no less than 30 percent of the time.

Seventy-four percent of those followed in the study were American, the researchers said, adding that the subjects came from a “wide range of socioeconomic backgrounds and occupations.”

“Mind-wandering is an excellent predictor of people's happiness,” said Killingsworth.

“This study shows that our mental lives are pervaded, to a remarkable degree, by the non-present.”

The application is available at www.trackyourhappiness.org.

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/afp/20101112/tls-health-us-brain-internet-aeafa1b.html



— Last Edited by Greentea at 2010-11-12 19:34:45 —

 
Posts [ 1 ] | Last post Nov. 19, 2010, 5:46 a.m.
#1 - Nov. 19, 2010, 5:46 a.m.
Dr. Who


This study couldn't be more right. I was a little curious about the type/quality of the Sex but that would be pushing it i guess? I would like to assume it is good, sleep-inducing sex, the pressure on us now is to find the Sex. Brilliant article. Its something i'm sure a couple of us have figured out for a long time, just wish the economy was not so bad (worrying again?)