Take any in-person community gathering. It takes work. And you can think of all that work as kind of a pipeline. Like, where is it going to happen? Who's hosting it with me? Who's going to invite people? That pipeline right now is really kind of hard. Each step has high drop-off rates. Because it's so hard, people don't do it. But imagine a world where our devices strengthen that pipeline.
Every 40 seconds, our attention breaks. It takes an act of extreme self-awareness to even notice. That’s why Gloria Mark, a professor in the Department of Informatics at University of California, Irvine, started measuring the attention spans of office workers with scientific precision. What she has discovered is not simply an explosion of disruptive communications, but a pandemic of stress that has followed workers from their offices to their homes. She shares the latest findings from the “science of interruptions,” and how we can stop forfeiting our attention to the next notification, and the next one, ad nauseam.