The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 16, 2025
Today: April 16, 2025

How to battle boredom at work

How to battle boredom at work
Coffee is not the only way to fight boredom.

Though neuroscience suggests that boredom can be good for us, we all try to avoid it. Even the most exciting jobs in the world โ€” astronaut, nuclear engineer, helicopter pilot, virus hunter โ€” can be filled with drudgery at times. Nobody is immune from paperwork and meetings.

The problem with boredom at work is that its negative effects can linger. You might be able to power through a mind-numbing task, like putting stamps on 500 envelopes, but in doing so you harm your ability to accomplish subsequent tasks. Suppressing boredom doesnโ€™t prevent its effects; it simply places them on hold until later.

Like whack-a-mole, downplaying boredom on one task results in attention and productivity deficits that will bubble up again.

In new peer-reviewed research, my colleagues and I show that a more effective approach is to alternate boring tasks with meaningful ones. This helps prevent the effects of boredom from spilling over into subsequent tasks.

These findings are based on several studies we conducted. For example, we asked volunteers to watch either a tedious video on the different kinds of paint that can be used inside a house or a more interesting one on a Rube Goldberg machine. On a subsequent task, the participants who watched the boring paint video mind-wandered more and were less productive โ€” but not when they were told that the task would be used to help children with autism. In other words, when the second task was made to appear meaningful, this offset some of the negative effects of boredom.

Boredom serves an important purpose. It signals to us that we should stop what weโ€™re doing and do something โ€” anything โ€” else. But boredom can become problematic if we try to ignore it.

The Conversation

Casher Belinda does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.


Source: The Conversation

Related Articles

Maine high school football player pledges to donate brain to science to help improve game safety Monkeys know who will win the election โ€“ primal instincts humans share with them shape votersโ€™ choices At-home brain stimulation relieves symptoms of depression, study finds What experts say about taking psilocybin as an alternative treatment for depression
Share This

Popular

Arts|Business|Entertainment|Lifestyle

NYC video store rewinds time with old school movie-buying experience rooted in nostalgia

NYC video store rewinds time with old school movie-buying experience rooted in nostalgia
Arts|Business|Lifestyle

Support blooms for Island flower shop owner who loses mom before grand opening

Support blooms for Island flower shop owner who loses mom before grand opening
Business|Economy|Finance|Political|US

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speech text April 16, 2025

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speech text April 16, 2025
Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

Powell says Fed to stay on hold until clarity on tariff impact

Powell says Fed to stay on hold until clarity on tariff impact

Science

Environment|Science|Technology|US

Solar storm could bring auroras farther south over the US than they typically appear

Solar storm could bring auroras farther south over the US than they typically appear
Education|Political|Science|US

US judge blocks Energy Department from slashing federal research funding

US judge blocks Energy Department from slashing federal research funding
Australia|Environment|Health|Science|World

Salmon migration affected by drug pollution in water from antianxiety medication

Salmon migration affected by drug pollution in water from antianxiety medication
Science|Technology

Dark energy may have once been โ€˜springierโ€™ than it is today โˆ’ DESI cosmologists explain what their collaborationโ€™s new measurement says about the universeโ€™s history

Dark energy may have once been โ€˜springierโ€™ than it is today โˆ’ DESI cosmologists explain what their collaborationโ€™s new measurement says about the universeโ€™s history

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In