I-JUST-THOUGHT-THIS-WAS-INTERESTING DEPT
Actually I both thought it was interesting...AND also I know that many of my Moebius friends love coffee, coffee shops, etc. Well, so, guess what--the buzz of a coffee shop not only can get you a good cup of joe; but it can also boost your creativity. And now you can get that boost at home or in your office cubicle:
Pulling up a seat at your favorite coffee shop may be the most
efficient way to write a paper or finish a work project. But now a new
Web site lets you bring the coffee shop to your cubicle.
The site, called Coffitivity,
was inspired by recent research showing that the whoosh of espresso
machines and caffeinated chatter typical of most coffee shops creates
just the right level of background noise to stimulate creativity. The
Web site, which is free, plays an ambient coffee shop soundtrack that,
according to researchers, helps people concentrate.
In a series of
experiments that looked at the effects of noise on creative thinking,
researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign had
participants brainstorm ideas for new products while they were exposed
to varying levels of background noise. Their results, published in The Journal of Consumer Research,
found that a level of ambient noise typical of a bustling coffee shop
or a television playing in a living room, about 70 decibels, enhanced
performance compared with the relative quiet of 50 decibels.
A
higher level of noise, however, about 85 decibels, roughly the noise
level generated by a blender or a garbage disposal, was too distracting,
the researchers found.
Ravi Mehta, an assistant professor of
business administration at the university who led the research, said
that extreme quiet tends to sharpen your focus, which can prevent you
from thinking in the abstract.
“This is why if you’re too focused
on a problem and you’re not able to solve it,” Dr. Mehta said, “you
leave it for some time and then come back to it and you get the
solution.”
But moderate levels can distract people just enough so
that they think more broadly. “It helps you think outside the box,” he
said.
The benefits of moderate noise, however, apply only to
creative tasks. Projects that require paying close attention to detail,
like proofreading a paper or doing your taxes, Dr. Mehta said, are
performed better in quiet environments.
In other studies,
he and his colleagues have found that exposure to certain colors can
play a role as well. Switching the color of your computer’s background
screen to blue enhances performance on creative tasks, for example,
while making it red helps with detail-oriented tasks. Large, open rooms
with high ceilings may also promote creative thinking, they found.
The
creators of the Coffitivity site struck upon their idea after
brainstorming on an unrelated start-up in the Richmond, Va., area.
“We
had been in and out of coffee shops, and we were getting really good
work done,” said ACe Callwood, a founder of the site and the coordinator
for entrepreneurship at the Virginia Commonwealth University business
school.
One member of the team, Justin Kauszler, noticed that when
he returned to his regular work space, in a subdued and sterile office,
his productivity took a nose-dive. When Mr. Kauszler’s boss shot down
his request to leave the office and work from a coffee shop, he and his
colleagues decided that they would bring their favorite coffeehouses to
their computers.
With some borrowed audio equipment in hand, they
eventually hit on a spot with the ideal noise level, a place called
Harrison Street Cafe.
“It had just the right mix of everything,”
Mr. Callwood said. “You could get the coffee machine, and you had people
talking and eating. It has two levels, and we got the vibe upstairs and
downstairs.”
Coffitivity started on March 4, and that day it got
about 120 page views. “I think our moms looked at it a hundred times,”
Mr. Callwood joked.
Since then, traffic has “exploded,” he said.
“Seoul, Korea, is our top user city. New York City is second, followed
by London, L.A. and Chicago.”
Mr. Callwood and his colleagues at
Coffitivity say they are now in the process of creating an app and
adding new coffee shop soundtracks tailored to specific countries.
“Australians apparently hate American accents,” he said. “We have Australians asking us for different audio sounds.
“We
had a rabbi reach out and say, ‘Hey, there’s a Jewish learning center
that has this very distinctive sound in Hebrew,’ and he asked if we
could put that kind of audio on the site. We told him that if he could
get us the audio, we’ll use it.”
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"Someone is enjoying shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago."--Warren Buffett
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