Check Your Email, Drop Your IQ
Sudden changes in direction and mental focus caused by handling large volumes of emails can have a greater negative impact on IQ than taking canabis, according to a psychiatrist at London University.
Have you ever worked with someone who devoted a large part of their day to answering emails? Do you devote a large part of your day to answering emails? A recent study at the University of London indicates that handling large volumes of email can drop IQ by 10 points, over twice the 4-point fall found in studies of cannabis users.
According to an article about the study in the Guardian newspaper, “Doziness, lethargy and an increasing inability to focus reached ’startling’ levels in the trials by 1,100 people, who also demonstrated that emails in particular have an addictive, drug-like grip”. The story goes on:
Respondents’ minds were all over the place as they faced new questions and challenges every time an email dropped into their inbox. Productivity at work was damaged and the effect on staff who could not resist trying to juggle new messages with existing work was the equivalent, over a day, to the loss of a night’s sleep.
“This is a very real and widespread phenomenon,” said Glenn Wilson, a psychiatrist from King’s College, London University, who carried out 80 clinical trials for TNS research, commissioned by the IT firm Hewlett Packard. The average IQ loss was measured at 10 points, more than double the four point mean fall found in studies of cannabis users.
The most damage was done, according to the survey, by the almost complete lack of discipline in handling emails. Dr Wilson and his colleagues found a compulsion to reply to each new message, leading to constant changes of direction which inevitably tired and slowed down the brain.
Manners are also going by the board, with one in five of the respondents breaking off from meals or social engagements to receive and deal with messages. Although nine out of 10 agreed that answering messages during face-to-face meetings or office conferences was rude, a third nonetheless felt that this had become “acceptable and seen as a sign of diligence and efficiency”.
If, like me, you find yourself giving over a little too much of your life to email, this sounds like a great reason to take another look at where we choose to invest our energy.
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Other articles by Dr Greg Mulhauser, Managing Editor
This article was last reviewed by on Thursday, 28th April 2005. You can leave a response below.
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