C'mon, admit it. Your train of thought has derailed like that many times. It's just mind-wandering. We all do it, and surprisingly often, whether we're struggling to avoid it or not.
Michael Kane, a psychologist at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, sampled the thoughts of students at eight random times a day for a week. He found that on average, they were not thinking about what they were doing 30 percent of the time.
Prior work has also turned up average rates of 30 percent to 40 percent in everyday life.
This from Yahoo News. ~
Photo by the Associated Press: University of British Columbia psychology student Sarah McGiven is wired for a study on mind wandering at UBC in Vancouver, Canada, Thursday, March 15, 2007. Mainstream psychology hasn't paid much attention to thisFor some students it was between 80 and 90 percent of the time. Out of the 126 participants, only one denied any mind-wandering at the sampled moments.
Photo by the Associated Press: University of British Columbia psychology student Sarah McGiven is wired for a study on mind wandering at UBC in Vancouver, Canada, Thursday, March 15, 2007. Mainstream psychology hasn't paid much attention to thisFor some students it was between 80 and 90 percent of the time. Out of the 126 participants, only one denied any mind-wandering at the sampled moments.
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