http://www.newsroom.ucla.edu/page.asp?RelNum=7212

  Date: July 25, 2006
Contact: Stuart Wolpert ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] )
Phone: 310-206-0511

Don’t Talk to a Friend While Reading This; Multi-Tasking Adversely  
Affects the Brain’s Learning Systems, UCLA Scientists Report

Multi-tasking affects the brain's learning systems, and as a result,  
we do not learn as well when we are distracted, UCLA psychologists  
report this week in the online edition of Proceedings of the National  
Academy of Sciences.

"Multi-tasking adversely affects how you learn," said Russell  
Poldrack, UCLA associate professor of psychology and co-author of the  
study. "Even if you learn while multi-tasking, that learning is less  
flexible and more specialized, so you cannot retrieve the information  
as easily. Our study shows that to the degree you can learn while  
multi-tasking, you will use different brain systems.

"The best thing you can do to improve your memory is to pay attention  
to the things you want to remember," Poldrack added. "Our data  
support that. When distractions force you to pay less attention to  
what you are doing, you don't learn as well as if you had paid full  
attention."

Tasks that require more attention, such as learning calculus or  
reading Shakespeare, will be particularly adversely affected by multi- 
tasking, Poldrack said.

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to  
examine brain activity and function, a technique that uses magnetic  
fields to spot active brain areas by telltale increases in blood oxygen.

Participants in the study, who were in their 20s, learned a simple  
classification task by trial-and-error. They were asked to make  
predictions after receiving a set of cues concerning cards that  
displayed various shapes, and divided the cards into two categories.  
With one set of cards, they learned without any distractions. With a  
second set of cards, they performed a simultaneous task: listening to  
high and low beeps through headphones and keeping a mental count of  
the high-pitch beeps. While the distraction of the beeps did not  
reduce the accuracy of the predictions — people could learn the task  
either way — it did reduce the participants' subsequent knowledge  
about the task during a follow-up session.

When the subjects were asked questions about the cards afterward,  
they did much better on the task they learned without the  
distraction. On the task they learned with the distraction, they  
could not extrapolate; in scientific terms, their knowledge was much  
less "flexible."

This result demonstrates a reduced capacity to recall memories when  
placed in a different context, Poldrack said.

"Our results suggest that learning facts and concepts will be worse  
if you learn them while you're distracted," Poldrack said.

Different forms of memory are processed by separate systems in the  
brain, he noted.  When you recall what you did last weekend or try to  
remember someone's name or your driver's license number, you are  
using a type of memory retrieval called declarative memory. (Patients  
with Alzheimer disease have damage in these brain areas.) When you  
remember how to ride a bicycle or how to play tennis, you are using  
what is called procedural memory; this requires a different set of  
brain areas than those used for learning facts and concepts, which  
rely on the declarative memory system. The beeps in the study  
disrupted declarative memory, said Poldrack, who also studies how the  
types of memory are related.

The brain's hippocampus — a sea-horse-shaped structure that plays  
critical roles in processing, storing and recalling information — is  
necessary for declarative memory, Poldrack said. For the task learned  
without distraction, the hippocampus was involved. However, for the  
task learned with the distraction of the beeps, the hippocampus was  
not involved; but the striatum was, which is the brain system that  
underlies our ability to learn new skills.

The striatum is the brain system damaged in patients with Parkinson  
disease, Poldrack noted. Patients with Parkinson's have trouble  
learning new motor skills but do not have trouble remembering the past.

"We have shown that multi-tasking makes it more likely you will rely  
on the striatum to learn," Poldrack said. "Our study indicates that  
multi-tasking changes the way people learn."

The researchers noted that they are not saying never to multi-task,  
just don't multi-task while you are trying to learn something new  
that you hope to remember. Listening to music can energize people and  
increase alertness. Listening to music while performing certain  
tasks, such as exercising, can be helpful. But tasks that distract  
you while you try to learn something new are likely to adversely  
affect your learning, Poldrack said.

"Concentrate while you're studying," he said.

The research is federally funded by the National Science Foundation  
(http://www.nsf.gov/) and the Whitehall Foundation (http:// 
www.whitehall.org/).

Poldrack noted that other research shows that talking on the phone  
badly impairs the ability to drive a car.

Co-authors are Karin Foerde, a UCLA graduate student in psychology,  
and Barbara Knowlton, UCLA associate professor of psychology.

About UCLA



California's largest university, UCLA enrolls approximately 38,000  
students per year and offers degrees from the UCLA College of Letters  
and Science and 11 professional schools in dozens of varied  
disciplines. UCLA consistently ranks among the top five universities  
and colleges nationally in total research-and-development spending,  
receiving more than $820 million a year in competitively awarded  
federal and state grants and contracts. For every $1 state taxpayers  
invest in UCLA, the university generates almost $9 in economic  
activity, resulting in an annual $6 billion economic impact on the  
Greater Los Angeles region. The university's health care network  
treats 450,000 patients per year. UCLA employs more than 27,000  
faculty and staff, has more than 350,000 living alumni and has been  
home to five Nobel Prize recipients.

-UCLA-

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