People spend 46.9 percent of their waking hours thinking about something
other than what they're doing, and this mind-wandering typically makes them
unhappy. So says a study that used an iPhone web app to gather 250,000 data
points on subjects' thoughts, feelings, and actions as they went about their
lives. The research, by psychologists Matthew A. Killingsworth and Daniel T.
Gilbert of Harvard University, is described this week in the journal Science.
"A human mind is a wandering mind, and a wandering mind is an unhappy mind,"
Killingsworth and Gilbert write. "The ability to think about what is not
happening is a cognitive achievement that comes at an emotional cost." Unlike
other animals, humans spend a lot of time thinking about what isn't going on
around them: contemplating events that happened in the past, might happen in the
future, or may never happen at all. Indeed, mind-wandering appears to be the
human brain's default mode of operation.
To track this behavior, Killingsworth developed an iPhone web app that contacted
2,250 volunteers at random intervals to ask how happy they were, what they were
currently doing, and whether they were thinking about their current activity or
about something else that was pleasant, neutral, or unpleasant. Subjects could
choose from 22 general activities, such as walking, eating, shopping, and
watching television. On average, respondents reported that their minds were
wandering 46.9 percent of time, and no less than 30 percent of the time during
every activity except making love.
"Mind-wandering appears ubiquitous across all activities," says Killingsworth, a
doctoral student in psychology at Harvard. "This study shows that our mental
lives are pervaded, to a remarkable degree, by the non-present." Killingsworth
and Gilbert, a professor of psychology at Harvard, found that people were
happiest when making love, exercising, or engaging in conversation. They were
least happy when resting, working, or using a home computer.
"Mind-wandering is an excellent predictor of people's happiness," Killingsworth
says. "In fact, how often our minds leave the present and where they tend to go
is a better predictor of our happiness than the activities in which we are
engaged." The researchers estimated that only 4.6 percent of a person's
happiness in a given moment was attributable to the specific activity he or she
was doing, whereas a person's mind-wandering status accounted for about 10.8
percent of his or her happiness.
Time-lag analyses conducted by the researchers suggested that their subjects'
mind-wandering was generally the cause, not the consequence, of their
unhappiness. "Many philosophical and religious traditions teach that happiness
is to be found by living in the moment, and practitioners are trained to resist
mind wandering and to 'be here now,'" Killingsworth and Gilbert note in Science.
"These traditions suggest that a wandering mind is an unhappy mind."
This new research, the authors say, suggests that these traditions are right.
Killingsworth and Gilbert's 2,250 subjects in this study ranged in age from 18
to 88, representing a wide range of socioeconomic backgrounds and occupations.
Seventy-four percent of study participants were American. More than 5,000 people
are now using the iPhone web app the researchers developed to study happiness,
which can be found at
www.trackyourhappiness.org.