The brain can unlock true multitasking after intensive training
Article excerpt
Georgetown researchers have discovered that the human brain can literally rewire itself to enable genuine multitasking, contradicting decades of neuroscience dogma that insisted our mental architecture fundamentally forbids it. The study reveals how intensive training automates learned tasks, freeing up cognitive resources for simultaneous activities. The findings suggest that what we've dismissed as impossible isn't a hard neurological limit but rather a skill that can be developed through deliberate practice. This challenges the conventional wisdom that has shaped everything from workplace policies to educational practices.