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Tuesday, March 01, 2011

Monica L. Smith - A Prehistory of Ordinary People


From Rorotoko, Monica L. Smith on her book, A Prehistory of Ordinary People - from the University of Arizona Press. Some background on Monica Smith:
Monica L. Smith is an anthropologist at the University of California, Los Angeles. She conducts research on urbanism and social dynamics through archaeological investigations, and has worked on digs and surveys in Turkey, Tunisia, Egypt, Italy, England, the United States, India, Bangladesh, and Madagascar. Besides A Prehistory of Ordinary People, featured in her Rorotoko interview, she is the editor of The Social Construction of Ancient Cities and author of a number of other books and research articles on ancient civilizations.
This sounds like an interesting look at our prehistory, as well as a contextualization of our current life conditions. Seems multitasking isn't so 21st century after all.

We inherited multitasking from our paleolithic ancestors

In a nutshell

Multitasking isn’t something new to the twenty-first century: our species was designed for it! On the cognitive, linguistic, and social level, humans are highly adapted to doing and thinking about many things at once.

Over a million years ago, our first tool-using ancestors learned to manage their time to address many different types of needs simultaneously, from gathering raw material and fighting off predators to investing in sophisticated communication in the form of language and gestures.

The skills exhibited by our earliest multitasking ancestors eventually made it possible for humans to adapt to many different conditions as they migrated throughout the world. Many cultures subsequently developed elaborate rituals, increased their resource base through the domestication of plants and animals, and gathered together for the construction of monuments.

We have inherited those talents today—that is how we can live in cities and multitask our way through our daily lives.

But multitasking isn’t just about doing many things at once. It’s also the cognitive ability to put down a piece of work and then pick it up again where you left off.

During the interval of not working on something, however, you may have acquired new information that affects how you complete the task. Our species evolved to be uniquely capable of interacting with the world through multiple stops and starts while interweaving new information and techniques for creative purposes.

Read the whole article.


1 comment:

  1. Thanks for sharing this! If you'd like, I can send you a review copy of "A Prehistory of Ordinary People" - maybe you'd want to run a longer excerpt or interview the author? Feel free to contact me (hollys@uapress.arizona.edu or 520-621-3920)

    Holly Schaffer
    Publicist @ UA Press

    ReplyDelete