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SasqWatch
Interesting article on introvertism. Read the full article from link but heres few snippets:
Allthough its equally important to be silent and not break other coworkers focus for no reason. I do it only if its really needed. Everytime you break somones work they loose their concentration and need considerable time to get back to it.
Year ago we moved from high-wall office to low-wall office. I really didnt like it and read som articles about it too. Theres more noise and distractions in such an enviroment. Somtimes I wonder if I could concentrate better working on home. Havent done that for 6 years. My boss asks about the distractions so is he is well aware of the issue though.
I still think its important for introverts to work with other people too. In many jobs you need to consult other people because you cant simply study and know everything yourself.But shyness and introversion share an undervalued status in a world that prizes extroversion. Children’s classroom desks are now often arranged in pods, because group participation supposedly leads to better learning; in one school I visited, a sign announcing “Rules for Group Work” included, “You can’t ask a teacher for help unless everyone in your group has the same question.” Many adults work for organizations that now assign work in teams, in offices without walls, for supervisors who value “people skills” above all. As a society, we prefer action to contemplation, risk-taking to heed-taking, certainty to doubt. Studies show that we rank fast and frequent talkers as more competent, likable and even smarter than slow ones. As the psychologists William Hart and Dolores Albarracin point out, phrases like “get active,” “get moving,” “do something” and similar calls to action surface repeatedly in recent books.
Once you know about sitters and rovers, you see them everywhere, especially among young children. Drop in on your local Mommy and Me music class: there are the sitters, intently watching the action from their mothers’ laps, while the rovers march around the room banging their drums and shaking their maracas.
Relaxed and exploratory, the rovers have fun, make friends and will take risks, both rewarding and dangerous ones, as they grow. According to Daniel Nettle, a Newcastle University evolutionary psychologist, extroverts are more likely than introverts to be hospitalized as a result of an injury, have affairs (men) and change relationships (women). One study of bus drivers even found that accidents are more likely to occur when extroverts are at the wheel.
In contrast, sitter children are careful and astute, and tend to learn by observing instead of by acting. They notice scary things more than other children do, but they also notice more things in general. Studies dating all the way back to the 1960’s by the psychologists Jerome Kagan and Ellen Siegelman found that cautious, solitary children playing matching games spent more time considering all the alternatives than impulsive children did, actually using more eye movements to make decisions. Recent studies by a group of scientists at Stony Brook University and at Chinese universities using functional M.R.I. technology echoed this research, finding that adults with sitter-like temperaments looked longer at pairs of photos with subtle differences and showed more activity in brain regions that make associations between the photos and other stored information in the brain.
THE psychologist Gregory Feist found that many of the most creative people in a range of fields are introverts who are comfortable working in solitary conditions in which they can focus attention inward. Steve Wozniak, the engineer who founded Apple with Steve Jobs, is a prime example: Mr. Wozniak describes his creative process as an exercise in solitude. “Most inventors and engineers I’ve met are like me,” he writes in “iWoz,” his autobiography. “They’re shy and they live in their heads. They’re almost like artists. In fact, the very best of them are artists. And artists work best alone … Not on a committee. Not on a team.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/26/opinion/sunday/26shyness.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all
Allthough its equally important to be silent and not break other coworkers focus for no reason. I do it only if its really needed. Everytime you break somones work they loose their concentration and need considerable time to get back to it.
Year ago we moved from high-wall office to low-wall office. I really didnt like it and read som articles about it too. Theres more noise and distractions in such an enviroment. Somtimes I wonder if I could concentrate better working on home. Havent done that for 6 years. My boss asks about the distractions so is he is well aware of the issue though.
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