Working memory, which helps people manage distractions, can reduce the impact of employees’ family problems at work, according to a new study.
Research by Oscar Ybarra, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Michigan, and Google researcher Todd Chan highlights the role of working memory—an ability to hold and manipulate information simultaneously in one’s mind—as it relates to family life affecting one’s job performance.
In other words, when intrusive thoughts enter the mind, working memory is needed to keep track of the thoughts one should remain focused on, says Ybarra, who is now a professor at the University of Illinois.
“Thus, working memory is required to ensure that if distractions intrude, individuals can maintain focus amidst those distractions,” he says.
Family life distractions could involve being responsive to a spouse or one’s parents, caring for children, keeping up with cleaning, or putting a meal together.
“The best many of us can hope for is to keep thoughts of family and home life at bay and out of mind so that we can focus on our work for a few hours,” says Chan, a psychology doctoral graduate of University of Michigan.
The researchers analyzed data from more than 2,500 people, who described their physical and psychological happenings at work and home. Study participants assessed job demands and resources, as well as disclosed problems with their spouse/partner, kids, and parents in the last 12 months.
To determine their working memory, participants were presented with a series of digits, one at a time, of increasing length/difficulty, and were asked to repeat them backward. Digits were presented starting with two-digit strings and they increased in length to a maximum of eight digits.
The study indicates that as people reported experiencing more family problems during the last year, the more they felt their job was demanding. This showed family problems seeping into their assessment of work, Ybarra says.
Individuals with lower working memory reported increasing job demands with more family problems, the study shows. This relationship does not hold for individuals with high working memory because they had an increased ability to prevent the stresses of the family domain from acting as a distraction to their work.
When there are few family problems, there is little need to utilize working memory, Ybarra says. This does not suggest that individuals with higher working memory experience fewer family problems—they’re just better able to fend off those distractions.
The findings appear in the journal Community, Work & Family.
Source: University of Michigan