The Benefits of Taking Breaks
You’ve been at work for five hours straight. Your mind is wandering, your shoulders are slumped, and
your eyelids are heavy. You know you need to get back on track. Surprisingly,
your best strategy might be to slack off.
“If you run and don’t fuel your body, you eventually
collapse,” says Karen Turner, the CEO of Turner Efficiency Coaching, a company
that helps businesses improve employee productivity. “The same thing happens
with work. If you don’t rest, you’ll crash.”
It may seem counterintuitive, but taking a break from the
task at hand can jump-start your brain, boost motivation and improve your
focus. And as research shows, more inane distractions can have especially
positive effects on your powers of concentration.
Most of us ditched our daily naps after preschool, but
scientific experiments suggest that was likely a mistake. Having a snooze –
even one as short as ten minutes – can improve alertness, memory and cognitive
performance.
It might also help you organise your thoughts. In a study
presented at a 2012 neuroscience conference, researchers at Georgetown
University in the US observed 15 people at rest. While subjects dozed, the
right hemispheres of their brains – the area associated with creativity – were
more active than the left hemispheres. Andrei Medvedev, a scientist involved
with the study, speculates that this activity might indicate that the brain
“could be doing some useful housecleaning during its down time, like
classifying data and consolidating memories.”
Experts say that between noon and 4pm is the ideal time for
napping. Some recommend taking a “caffeine nap” – drinking a cup of coffee,
then snoozing for 15 minutes or less. The combo can boost energy and leave you
feeling sharper.
Scrolling through galleries of baby animals is good for the
soul, but it might benefit your performance, too. In a 2012 Japanese study,
participants were asked to play a version of the board game Operation, which
involves precise motor skills. During a short break, one group was shown photos
of puppies and kittens, while the other viewed pictures of older animals.
When the groups resumed the game, participants who had
viewed snaps of younger animals improved their scores by 34%. Their
counterparts showed only a 9% improvement. The researchers suggested that
“cuteness” may tap into human nuturing instincts to care for infants, which
induces an added degree of diligence and carefulness in behaviour. So the next
time you encounter a slide show of the “15 Cutest Piglets Wearing Boots” online,
consider clicking through as an investment in your mental acuity.
The funny article your friend posted on Facebook may seem
like a waste of time, but taking a few minutes to check your social media feeds
can help you focus. In 2009, Australian researchers found that workers who
spent up to 20% of their time during the day surfing the internet were 9% more
productive than peers who avoided cyberloafing altogether. However, this
approach has its limits: productivity levels were shown to dip when subjects
spent more than 20% of their day online.
To maximise the effectiveness of mini browsing breaks,
Brent Coker, the study’s lead researcher, suggests workers visit the sites that
make them the happiest. “The more enjoyable the break, the better it was in
terms of boosting productivity,” he says.
Dr Coker also advises dividing your time into chunks.
“After about 40 to 60 minutes, people’s attention starts to wane,” he says.
“Work for that stretch, then set aside five to ten minutes for a break.”
Because all brain activity burns glucose, even something as
simple as multi-tasking can take a toll on your mental energy. You can help
replenish those stores by taking a few moments to “reset” your brain.
Daydreaming is one method – when you let your mind wander, you’re allowing it
to cool down.
“You’re detaching from the cognitive demands of constantly
switching between tasks,” says Vinod Menon, a professor at California’s
Stanford University who discovered a brain network involved in daydreaming.
Moderation is key, however.
So whether you’re planning dinner or your next trip, it
pays to temporarily have your head in the clouds.
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