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What happens when we focus?

Posted: Tue Dec 17, 2024 10:17 am
by tanmoy666
This filtering process therefore leads to us choosing the most relevant from the incoming stimuli and focusing our attention on that. It is important to remember that we can only focus on a limited number of stimuli, but that we do receive everything. This causes you to sometimes be distracted. For example, when you hear your name in a conversation between colleagues while working that you had previously ignored.

We can focus on one stimulus, but also on several at the same time. When we focus on one stimulus, it is usually quite intensive. So intensive that interesting effects arise. The intensive azerbaijan phone number library focus on one stimulus leads to us easily missing other stimuli. What can happen then you can see in the video below. Partly because of this experiment we know that officer Conley probably told the truth three years earlier.

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What causes our attention to wane?
Focusing on a stimulus costs mental energy, of which we only have a limited amount. As I wrote earlier this year, consciously focusing is one of the most energy-consuming tasks we do. And that is why we do not keep it up for very long. The amount of mental energy that people have varies from day to day. For example, if you have not slept well or have a hangover, you have less mental energy and therefore less capacity to focus. You are then less able to 'keep your head in the game' and are more easily distracted.

Distraction is what happens when another stimulus grabs your attention while you are focused on another. That stimulus is then seen as more relevant by the filtering process and disrupts your focus. This is not a rational decision, as you read above. It is largely influenced by the degree to which a stimulus is salient to the filtering process.