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Over thinking thinking?

March 27th, 2009

To paraphrase Bill Clinton, it depends what the definition of “thinking” is.

An interesting interview on Seed‘s website with the Jonah Lehrer, author of “The Black Box of Decision Making”

Short version of an article worth reading: do we over think important decisions?  The reductive: what is the optimal way to think about important decisions?

It turns out the answer is out is yes, we rely too much on our conscious analytic abilities to make important decisions.  Apparently our conscious brains cannot process huge amounts of data (e.g. the rise and weed proliferation of Twitter).  Thankfully we do have a cerebral processor that can handle huge amounts of data – our unconscious mental processing:  “Research suggests that it’s complex decisions, the ones that involve lots of information, that benefit the most from unconscious emotional processing. The conscious brain can only handle a very limited amount of information at one time?—?seven digits, plus or minus two. Unconsciously, however, you can process tons of information.”

To make matters worse, our self confidence in our conscious analytic capabilities only exacerbate the decisions making process.  By ignoring or diminishing the value of new information, we essentially seal our unconscious brain away from new data to process and synthesize into new insights.

The articles recommendation? Be open to new information, go with your gut, and for heaven sake, don’t over analyze those big decisions.  Your brain has already done it for you.  Just trust it.

michaelsevilla Boulder, Creative Process, Decision Making, Drawing Insights , , , ,

Yeah Baby, BIBA

July 30th, 2008

BIBA = Back in Boulder Again!

This past monday i returned to boulder to work for hivelive.  In many ways, hivelive is similar to umbria where i worked for nearly 2.5 years.  The space is the same, albeit with a different twist.  And the funding, number of employees and what I would call state of the product are also similar.

Given all that I learned at umbria, it will be great to apply those learnings to hivelive.

Onward!

michaelsevilla Boulder