Going out to lunch zaps
mental focus
By Jessica Shugart in Science News
Lunch at a restaurant
with a friend could lessen the brain’s aptitude for detailed tasks back at
work, a new study suggests. If an error-free afternoon is the goal, perhaps
workers should consider hastily consuming calories alone at their desks.
But bosses shouldn’t rush
to glue workers to their chairs just yet. The research is only a first stab at
teasing out how a sociable lunch affects work performance, says study leader
Werner Sommer of Humboldt University in Berlin.
Half of the women
enjoyed meals over a leisurely hour with a friend at a casual Italian
restaurant. The other group picked up their meals from the same restaurant, but
had only 20 minutes to eat alone in a drab office. People who went out to lunch
got to choose from a limited vegetarian menu; participants in the office group
had meals that matched the choice of a member of the other group.
After lunch, the group
that dined in bland solitude performed better on a task that assesses rapid
decision making and focus, the researchers report July 30 in PLOS ONE.
Measurements of brain activity also suggested that the brain’s error-monitoring
system could be running at sub-par levels in those who ate out.
Sommer acknowledges that
several factors besides the meal context could have affected the results. For
instance, the people who ate in the office had no choice of food and did not
get to socialize, read or surf the web.
And the news is not all
bad for diners out, Sommer says. Being less rigidly focused could come in handy
when navigating sticky social situations or solving problems creatively.
Sommer’s lab is testing the effects of social meals on workers’ creativity and
generosity.
“Being a little less
focused could be good or bad, depending on the situation,” says psychologist
Paul Rozin of the University of Pennsylvania. “If you’re running the control
tower at the airport you wouldn’t want this. But if you’re trying to think of a
new idea, you might.”
CITATIONS
W. Sommer. How about
lunch? Consequences of the meal context on cognition and emotion. PLOS One.
Posted online July 31, 2013. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0070314 [Go to]
SUGGESTED
READING
J. Raloff. When meal
times no longer focus on food. Science News. Posted online January 31,
2011. [Go to]