Put down your devices and let your mind wander: People underestimate how enjoyable it is to just sit and think, study finds
- Academics got volunteers to sit alone for up to 20 minutes without distractions
- They weren't allowed to do anything distracting like reading or looking at phones
- Volunteers underestimated how much they'd enjoy time with their own thoughts
If you spend too much time on your smartphone, a new study shows it really might be more enjoyable to put your device down and just 'let your mind wander'.
Researchers in Japan tasked volunteers with sitting in a room without any distractions – such as a smartphone – for up to 20 minutes.
Over several different scenarios, participants underestimated how enjoyable it would be to sit and think without anything to distract them.
The results are important in our modern era of 'information overload' and constant access to distractions, the experts say, including pervasive forms of technology.

People consistently underestimate how much they would enjoy spending time alone with their own thoughts, without anything to distract them, according to the new research (file photo)
The new study was conducted by experts at institutions in Japan, in collaboration with the University of Reading.
'Humans have a striking ability to immerse themselves in their own thinking,' said lead study author Aya Hatano, PhD, of Kyoto University in Japan.
'Our research suggests that individuals have difficulty appreciating just how engaging thinking can be.
'That could explain why people prefer keeping themselves busy with devices and other distractions, rather than taking a moment for reflection and imagination in daily life.'
The team conducted a series of six experiments with a total of 259 participants, all college students from either Japan or the UK.
Researchers compared people's predictions of how much they would enjoy simply sitting and thinking with their actual experience of doing so.
In the first experiment, they asked people to predict how much they would enjoy sitting alone with their thoughts for 20 minutes.
They weren't permitted to do anything distracting such as reading, walking around, looking at a smartphone or evening taking a quick nap.
Afterwards, participants reported how much they had enjoyed doing nothing, other than just sitting in their chair.
The researchers found that people enjoyed spending time with their thoughts significantly more than they had predicted.
This held true across variations of the experiment – whether they were sat in a bare conference room or in a small dark tented area with no visual stimulation, or if they were sitting for three minutes or for 20 minutes.

Pictured is the experimental set-up - a bare conference room (left) and a small dark tented area with no visual stimulation (right)
In another experiment, the researchers compared one group of participants' predictions of how much they would enjoy thinking with another group's predictions of how much they would enjoy checking the news on the internet.
The thinking group expected to enjoy the task significantly less than the news-checking group, but afterward, the two groups reported similar enjoyment levels.
Researchers stressed that participants did not rate thinking as an extremely enjoyable task, but simply as more enjoyable than they thought it would be. On average, participants' enjoyment level was around 3 to 4 on a 7-point scale.
The results could help the public disengage from their smartphones and 'positively engage' with themselves.
'On the bus on your way to work, you can check your phone rather than immerse yourself in your internal free-floating thinking, because you predict thinking will be boring,' said study co-author Dr Kou Murayama at the University of Reading.
'However, if that prediction is inaccurate, you are missing an opportunity to positively engage yourself without relying on such stimulation.'
Future research could explore the reasons why people underestimate how much they'll enjoy thinking, or which types of thinking are most enjoyable and motivating.
'Not all thinking is intrinsically rewarding, and in fact some people are prone to vicious cycles of negative thinking,' Dr Murayama said.
Results also need to be replicated in more diverse populations than the current study, in which all participants were from Japan or the UK.
Different countries have different levels of smartphone addiction, a recent study revealed, so it's possible Chinese citizens, for example, enjoy just sitting and thinking a lot less than citizens from other countries.
The new study has been published today in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.
Most watched News videos
- 'You know I'm Sussex now': Awkward moment Meghan addresses name
- Meghan: 'If you break something precious, it can be healed'
- Hot mic reveals what Trump said before Zelensky was kicked out
- Meghan floods new Netflix cookery show with bizarre tips
- Meghan makes apparent jab at Royal Family during her brunch toast
- Rep holds 'This is not normal' sign as Trump enters Capitol chamber
- Onlookers film bloodbath scene along busy Cuacnopalan-Oaxaca highway
- Drunk woman lashes out on police officers and gets arrested
- Trudeau talks directly to Trump in news conference about Tariff war
- President Donald Trump appears to drag his leg while walking
- Applause as Melania enters Capitol for Trump's address to Congress
- Furious wife catches husband with mistress in the back of a van