How close do you get to the internet?

How close are you to the Internet? I don’t mean the degree to which you feel connected to it; nor do I mean how much understanding you have of it. No, I actually mean how close are you physically? What’s the distance, right now, between your face and your computer screen? Probably between 18 and 24 inches, if you’re like most people.

Closeness to PC can affect thinking 

Sitting too close to your PC may reduce your ability to think effectively

However, new research suggests you might be able to improve your online performance if you back off from the web – literally. Psychologists in Holland, at the University if Nijmegen have shown that there is a link between your physical situation and your ability to think.

For many years psychologists have been able to show associations between body language and cognitive capabilities. For instance, when we do not want to think about something, we often use a pushing away motion with our hands. We are literally pushing away the thought, it seems. Other body movements and our thinking patterns have also been established over the years.

What the Dutch scientists have now done is extend that knowledge by showing there is a distinct improvement in our ability to think when we change our body position. They were looking at the “Stroop effect“. This is a standard psychological test in which the words of colours are printed in text of other colours and you have to say either which colour you see, or which colour you read.

 

The Stroop Effect 

The Stroop Effect

When participants in the study were asked to step backwards from the test, their ability to perform the test accurately increased significantly. Literally taking a step backwards appeared to give them the space to think.

Working at computers this could be especially important. Sitting close to the computer screen could hamper your ability to think or to solve problems. The study suggests that if you need to consider things more carefully you’d be more likely to succeed if you lean back in your chair, or move away from the computer.

It also suggests another physical possibility. If you want to get closer to your customers online, or feel more connected to your online community in Facebook or Twitter, moving forwards towards your computer screen could have an impact. There is clearly a link between your physicality and your thinking ability and patterns – not taking it into account could affect your business performance.

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