The Mind's Wanderlust: A Meta-Analysis of Mind Wandering, Task-Related Interference, and Learning

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Students engaged in learning experience both on and off-task thoughts. Prior research has focused on task-unrelated thoughts (TUT or mind wandering). However, off-task thoughts may also bear some relationship to the task (task-related interference, TRI). This meta-analysis aimed to determine the frequency of off-task thoughts (TRI + TUT) and the correlation of these with learning outcomes. The study included 28 samples using meta-analysis of single means for frequency determination and a mixed-effects model to examine correlations. The results show that TRI occurs 23% of the time and is not correlated with learning outcomes. TUTs occur 29% of the time and are negatively correlated with learning outcomes. Overall, based on a separate meta-analysis, off-task thoughts occur 51% of the time and are negatively correlated with learning outcomes. The results suggest that TRI should be accounted for when studying off-task thoughts, and unlike TUTs, are not considered detrimental to the learning process.

Article activity feed