Brief interruptions spawn errors that could be disastrous for professionals
January 8, 2013

Avoiding interruptions (credit: iStockphoto)
Short interruptions — such as the few seconds it takes to silence that buzzing smartphone — have a surprisingly large effect on one’s ability to accurately complete a task, according to new research by Michigan State University psychologists.
The study found that interruptions averaging 2.8 seconds long doubled the error rate, while interruptions averaging 4.4 s long tripled the error rate.
Brief interruptions are ubiquitous in today’s society, from text messages to a work colleague poking his head in the door and interrupting an important conversation. But the ensuing errors can be disastrous for professionals such as airplane mechanics and emergency room doctors, said Erik Altmann, lead researcher on the study.
“What this means is that our health and safety is, on some level, contingent on whether the people looking after it have been interrupted,” said Altmann, MSU associate professor of psychology.
The study, funded by the U.S. Navy’s Office of Naval Research, is one of the first to examine brief interruptions of relatively difficult tasks.
The study

Sample stimulus for the interrupting task (credit: Erik M. Altmann et al./Journal of Experimental Psychology: General)
The study participants (300 college undergraduates) were asked to perform a series of tasks in a specific order, such as identifying with a keystroke whether a letter was closer to the start or the end of the alphabet. Even without interruptions, a small number of errors in sequence were made.
Sometimes participants were interrupted and told to type two letters — which took 2.8 seconds — before returning to the task. When this happened, they were twice as likely to mess up the sequence.
Altmann said he was surprised that such short interruptions had a large effect. The interruptions lasted no longer than each step of the main task, he noted, so the time factor likely wasn’t the cause of the errors. Also, non-sequence errors showed no interruption effects
“So why did the error rate go up?” Altmann said. “The answer is that the participants had to shift their attention from one task to another. Even momentary interruptions can seem jarring when they occur during a process that takes considerable thought.”
One potential solution, particularly when errors would be costly, is to design an environment that protects against interruptions. “So before you enter this critical phase: All cell phones off at the very least,” Altmann said.
Note that some types of interruptions may have larger effects. For example, a study of media multitasking by Boston College researchers found that being in a room with both a television and a computer was particularly distracting. And trying to do two visual tasks at once hurt performance in both tasks significantly more than combining a visual and an audio task, Ohio State University researchers found.
My cat jumped on my lap a few times while writing this, so I have a valid excuse for any errors you find in this article. — Ed.
References:
- Altmann, E. M., Trafton, J. G., Hambrick, D. Z., Momentary interruptions can derail the train of thought., Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2013, in press
Comments (12)
by Cybernettr
They must have conducted that research using some rather old Macs, since that screenshot is from a piece of pre-Mac OS X software.
by Tom Armstrong
Essentially a group of ‘experts’ are telling us that an interuption in concentration is not a helpful? Doh…………………..!
by pete r.
The same can be seen in music. For most people, even a small distraction increases the probability of hitting a wrong note.
by Kris Knight
Typing two letters took 2.8 seconds????? I find that nearly impossible to believe. Is THAT an error?
by Tony Stender
Good to see my experiment with a Samsung tablet and the football games on Sunday left me unsatisfied with any of my usual relaxing distractions.
Rather it was like a totally confusing and unfinished feeling.
I always seem to get more done, alone with my own unfinished thoughts, which need sorting and cleaning up to make comprehensible.
Seems like one question can force my brain to begin to try to answer it as soon as it is heard.
Maybe that is the power of questions. They shift attention away from the context of the working neurons, to other un-related contexts. Thus leaving the other project neurons un-reinforced and abandoned.
I have often wondered at the power of a question to seemingly force the mind to begin to think of an answer.
Does anyone else here understand this question enough to answer it confidently?
by Family Guy
Consider the effect of a large family size on the academic potential of children.
Having no siblings, I don’t know, but in many cases siblings don’t seem to be helpful in concentrating on your homework (especially when the house is not large enough). Having a large bunch of siblings, which is not uncommon among those who are found to be in the academically struggling group, would seem to be practically disastrous unless you wear earplugs.
Just another overpopulation negative..
by Mr.X
Here, for you family guy (probably named after the cartoon, considering your comment):
http://overpopulationisamyth.com/
by Jo Sturdy
As a divergent thinker I am always multi tasking, I tend to answer calls, check text messages and emails as well as writing training session plans and reports. Not to mention chatting and sharing ideas with colleagues who sit around me. Up till recently I thought this was a good thing! Since learning more about neuroscience I realise that it was not the most helpful way to operate. I find the open office enironment can really distract me as I love to brainstorm so now when I need to focus I find a quiet space away from colleages so that I am not distracted and, equally importantly, I am not tempted to distract others either! Thank you for the timely reminder.
by Doug
Hmm, how did you get your cat to write the article while jumping on your lap? I’d say your cat did pretty well, for a cat.
by Editor
Catnip. It’s crack for cats. :-)
by Bri
It’s interesting that this is finally getting some attention. The vast majority of errors that humans make are the result of distractions. Those are for all intents and purposes, interruptions.
by Editor
Ooops, phone ringing, brb….