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How Setting Challenging Goals Can Reduce Mental Fatigue: New Study Shows Promising Results

Setting challenging goals can reduce mental fatigue

Entered 2024.03.11 22:05 Entered 2024.03.11 22:05 Modified 2024.03.11 14:25 Views 162

Is it possible for people to engage in mental tasks without feeling fatigued? [사진=게티이미지뱅크]Even if you haven’t put in a lot of physical effort, such as working overnight, you may feel dazed, distracted, and exhausted after a long project. Regarding this phenomenon, some scholars have argued that just as physical activity causes muscle fatigue, mental effort depletes the limited energy supply and causes fatigue. This is because the brain consumes energy in the form of glucose and may later become insufficient.

According to the non-profit academic media The Conversation, this mental fatigue is mostly a psychological phenomenon and can be corrected through goal setting.

World War II-era psychologists studied why soldiers monitoring radars lost concentration during shifts. Psychologist Norman Macworth asked military participants to look at a large clock on the wall for up to two hours. The second hand ticked at regular intervals, but occasionally jumped two spaces unpredictably. Participants were asked to detect these changes in the second hand.

Within the first 30 minutes, participants’ detection abilities declined significantly. But after that, it continued to gradually decline. In response, psychologists named the necessary mental concentration ‘vigilance’ and concluded that vigilance is fundamentally limited in humans.

Since then, decades of research have confirmed that it is difficult to maintain vigilance even for a short period of time. Studies have shown that people report feeling stressed and tired even after brief tasks that put them on alert. Another study found that blood flow through the brain decreased during periods of alertness.

Is it possible for people to engage in mental tasks without feeling fatigued? Researchers conducted three experiments to study whether goal setting can improve mental focus. In the first experiment, 108 college students were shown a screen with four empty white boxes on a gray background. Every 1 to 3 seconds, an X appeared in one of the four boxes. Participants were asked to indicate as quickly as possible where the symbol appeared. During the 26-minute test, participants were periodically asked to rate their mental state as task-focused, distracted, or mind-wandering.

Additionally, specific goals were randomly presented to half of the participants. The goal was to keep reaction times under 400 milliseconds while maintaining as much accuracy as possible.

The study found that people who were given specific goals did not experience as many slow reaction times. However, having a goal did not increase top speed. Additionally, the frequency with which people felt distracted did not change.

The second experiment involved assigning goals to half of the 112 new participants and not assigning goals to the other half. This time, as the experiment progressed, the target difficulty was increased from 450 milliseconds to 400 milliseconds, and in the final block to 350 milliseconds. Studies have shown that setting more difficult goals over time has a significant impact on performance.

Compared to participants who were assigned set goals in the first experiment, reaction times were on average 45 milliseconds faster for participants who were assigned increasingly difficult goals in the second experiment. Participants in the second experiment also reported fewer instances of mind wandering and showed no slowing of reaction times throughout the experiment. In other words, they showed no signs of mental fatigue. The third experiment was a repeat of the second experiment, and the results were the same.

Ultimately, people are more motivated when working toward specific, difficult-to-achieve goals and do not feel exhausted by mental tasks.

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2024-03-11 13:08:14

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