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NEWS
Microsoft

Our attention span now worse than goldfish's

Neal Colgrass
Newser staff
Goldfish have an attention span of nine seconds, researchers say.

NEWSER) – Your attention span is, uh... well... whatever, but it probably can't beat that of your average goldfish, a new study says. Microsoft reached this conclusion after surveying more than 2,000 Canadians and monitoring the brain activity of 112 people, Yahoo! Canada reports. In our age of buzzing phones and 140-character news items, they say, the Canadian attention span has dropped from an average of 12 seconds in 2000 to the jittery low of eight seconds today. The average goldfish, it's believed, can concentrate for nine, researchers say. "Canadians with more digital lifestyles ... struggle to focus in environments where prolonged attention is needed," the study says. More specifically, 44% of survey respondents say they struggle to focus on tasks and 37% say their inability to use time well forces them to work late or on weekends, the National Post reports.

In the brain-activity phase, participants performed "game-like tasks" designed to measure attention span while researchers measured their brainwaves with electroencephalography (EEG), the Globe and Mail reports. The upshot: Digitally savvy consumers start with powerful attention and fade, while others are less engaged at first but can concentrate for longer. The findings held true for young and old alike, by the way. Microsoft conducted the study in part to help marketing firms reach modern-day audiences: "We wanted to understand how [digital life is] affecting the way that Canadians see and interact with the world," a consumer expert at Microsoft tells the Ottawa Citizen. "It's our new 'newsfeed reality,' as I like to put it." ("Wasting time on the Internet" is now an Ivy League class.)

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