When you switch from one task to another, your attention doesn't immediately follow—part of it remains stuck thinking about the previous task. This creates what Professor Sophie Leroy calls attention residue.
Research findings on this effect:
This explains why constant context switching between deep and shallow work is so harmful—your brain never reaches its full cognitive potential on your important work.
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Similar ideas to The Attention Residue Effect
When you switch from some Task A to another Task B, your attention doesn’t immediately follow – a residue of your attention remains stuck thinking about the original task. This residue gets especially thick if your work on Task A was unbounded and of low intensity before you switched, but even if...
•High quality work produced = time spent x intensity of focus
• More intensity of focus, less time spent
• Attention residue - when you switch from some Task A to another Task B, your attention doesn’t immediately follow—a residue of your attention re...
Single-handling means working on a task continuously until it's 100% complete. This approach dramatically increases productivity because:
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