这是一个使用Ever Works构建的演示目录网站
Does Time Management Work? (Meta-Analysis)
A comprehensive meta-analysis (PMC7799745) evaluating the effectiveness of time management on performance and well-being across 158 studies and 490 effect sizes. Findings show time management is moderately related to job performance, academic achievement, and well-being, with life satisfaction showing a particularly strong correlation.
Anders Ericsson's High-Performance Practice Method
Research methodology from psychologist Anders Ericsson demonstrating that elite performers across domains (music, chess, sports) achieve maximum effectiveness through intense 60-90 minute practice sessions followed by recovery periods including naps. This finding has been widely adopted as a framework for structuring productive work days around the body's natural ultradian rhythms.
80% Productivity Boost from Time Blocking
Research-backed productivity improvement achieved through the practice of time blocking, where dedicating specific calendar blocks to focused tasks can increase output by up to 80% compared to reactive scheduling.
Ai Time Categorization Accuracy 2026
Research item about ai-time-categorization-accuracy-2026
Attention Residue Mitigation
Research item about attention-residue-mitigation
Calendar Tetris Phenomenon
Research item about calendar-tetris-phenomenon
Context Collapse Remote Work
Research item about context-collapse-remote-work
30-60 Second Focus Entry (Neuroscience)
Neuroscience finding that spending 30-60 seconds staring at a specific point before deep work narrows the visual field and triggers norepinephrine release, priming the brain for focused cognitive effort.
10 IQ Point Drop from Heavy Multitasking
Research finding from a 2024 study showing that heavy multitasking can lead to a temporary drop of up to 10 IQ points, a reduction greater than the effect of losing a night's sleep, highlighting severe cognitive costs of task switching.
2-3 Hour Daily Deep Focus Limit
Research from Hubstaff's 2026 Global Work Index showing the average team member only spends 2-3 hours per day in deep focus, based on data from over 140,000 workers across 17,000 organizations, highlighting the scarcity of focused work time.
2.5% Supertaskers Statistic
Research finding showing only 2.5% of people are 'supertaskers' who can genuinely multitask without performance degradation. For the remaining 97.5% of the population, multitasking is actually rapid task switching with cognitive penalties.
66-Day Habit Formation Timeline
Research from European Journal of Social Psychology finding it takes an average of 66 days to form a new habit. Critical insight for time tracking adoption and productivity practice implementation, explaining why consistency matters more than perfection.
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