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Author Topic:   Study Shows Clutter Is A Good Thing!
Randall
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posted August 12, 2013 01:49 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Here's a toast to the slob in the office, the gal with so much junk on her desk she can't find her telephone. All that clutter may be part of the reason she is so creative.

For years, we've been told that piles of personal rubbish have got to be a liability. Now there's a flip side to that theorem.

Researchers at the University of Minnesota decided to take a look at a long-established principle of human honesty and productivity -- keep your work area clean and you will be more likely to work your tail off, stay honest, be generous with your coworkers, and on and on.

Cleanliness, after all, is next to godliness.

"We were thinking about doing a paper showing how being tidy makes people kind of do the right thing," psychologist Kathleen Vohs, lead author of a study in the journal Psychological Science, said in a telephone interview. "And then we started challenging ourselves. Is there anything that goes along with a messy environment that could be good?"

So Vohs and her co-workers conducted a series of experiments in Holland and the United States to see if there's an up-side to untidiness. The finding, she said, surprised even the researchers.

A messy work environment, the research suggested, can bring out a person's creativity and lead to the birth of bold, new ideas. In other words, a less- than-perfect work environment can make a person more likely to think out of the box, or at least above the horizon of those neat people in the office.

That doesn't mean you can set a nitwit in front of a cluttered desk and end up with another Einstein, who is said to have muttered these immortal words: "If a cluttered desk is a sign of a cluttered mind, of what, then, is an empty desk a sign?"

Numerous historic photos of Einstein's office show he was no neat freak.

No amount of clutter is going to make an empty brain creative, but this research indicates that a little clutter may bring out the freshest and most creative side of you.

"The environment doesn't create something that isn't already there," Vohs said. "To the extent that you are creative, it pulls it out of you."

Not a lot of researchers have taken up the banner of messy desks, so there's not much to compare this work with, but the research involved a large number of participants, both young and old, and it led to these conclusions:

Sociology's "broken windows theory" is not entirely accurate. According to Vohs' study, that theory "posits that minor signs of disorder can cause much bigger consequences, such as delinquency and criminality." But her research suggested a less-pristine environment can leave persons free to turn to creativity instead of crime.

"Orderly environments would encourage adherence to social convention and overall conservatism, whereas disorderly environments would encourage people to seek novelty and unconventional routes."

"Our findings imply that varying the environment can be an effective way to shape behavior."

Those findings resulted from three experiments in which participants were assigned tasks while seated in a neat, orderly office, or in an office that was identical in every way except it was filled with clutter, such as papers on the floor and stacks of files on the desk.

Thirty-four Dutch students were tested to see if the orderliness of the room had any effect on their generosity and sense of needing to do the right thing. At the end of the experiment, for example, the students were asked to contribute to a worthy cause.

Some 82 percent of the students in the orderly room contributed money, compared to only 47 percent in the disorderly room.

As they left the room, they were offered a treat, either an apple or a piece of candy. Participants from the orderly room were more than three times as likely to take the apple. Moral: orderliness brought out a need do the right thing.

In a second experiment, participants were told to come up with new uses for ping-pong balls to help a manufacturer.

"Participants in the disorderly room generated more highly creative ideas than did participants in the orderly room," the study said.

In the final experiment, 188 American adults were asked to pick from a list of new options to be added to a restaurant's menu. Participants from the orderly room were far more likely to pick a healthy option than were participants from a disorderly room.

The researchers described the findings as "robust," meaning there was little question that the environment directly influenced the behavior of the participants.

"Disorderly environments seem to inspire breaking free of tradition, which can produce fresh insights," the researchers concluded. "Orderly environments, in contrast, encourage convention and playing it safe."

Something good can come from either setting, Vohs said. A tidy workplace may help people walk a straight line. A messy desk may help them figure out a new way to keep from walking at all.

Years ago I was fortunate to spend three days with Linus Pauling, including one day at his estate on California's Big Sur coastline, which he bought with the winnings from his second Nobel Prize. I was eager to see the living room in his home, because I had read that he wrote many of his scores of research papers while standing at a grand piano.

But when I entered the room, I had trouble even finding the piano. Files and research notes were stacked from floor to ceiling around the entire room. I finally spotted one leg of the piano, which was also covered with papers.

Only one corner of the piano had enough vacant space for the old chemist to stand and share his wisdom.

Apparently, other things were more important to him than tidiness.

http://gma.yahoo.com/einstein-clutter-good-041249899--abc-news-topstories.html

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Randall
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posted August 13, 2013 04:21 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I must be a genius then!

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Hera
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From: Aries fantasy land ^_^
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posted August 13, 2013 05:09 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Hera     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
This is bad, this is very bad news for my desks from now on!

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Faith
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posted August 13, 2013 05:21 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Faith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Hera you crack me up! I'm always smiling at your comments.

When I go on a cleaning binge, I can't think of anything but cleaning. That's why I like to devote whole days to cleaning...my mind is in gear and I can't stop.

On other days, I have to just let the clutter go, or I can't accomplish anything else (I have five kids and picking up clutter is my life story.) So, thankfully, I have this filter and I can block it out.

Some people CANNOT block the clutter out, ever. I think they're the ones who don't have the mental space to be creative, because they are so worried about dust bunnies, paper clips in the wrong bin, and sticky notes that have to be thrown out, they can't ease up and think.

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mirage29
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posted August 13, 2013 09:30 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for mirage29     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I'm a 'flat space occupier'

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charmainec
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posted August 14, 2013 04:49 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for charmainec     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Hmmm. I'm a bit of a neat freak yet when I'm doing something creative i.e painting a portrait for eg.then it's a messy affair.

The "mess" gives me a sense of freedom; imagine all my goody gats were all neat and tidy, as Faith mentioned, one would concentrate more on keeping it all neat which would break the creative process.

Maybe this theory is partially correct.

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Randall
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posted August 16, 2013 03:32 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I make a mess when I eat.

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AcousticGod
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posted August 16, 2013 04:43 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for AcousticGod     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I'm a strange mix of clutter and cleanliness. When my wife was gone last weekend, there wasn't any clutter added to the house, but at the same time my desk and office are generally more cluttered than hers. She often clutters the kitchen, and I go behind and deal with the aftermath.

I've always been prone to clutter...because there's no place for everything to go. I imagine creating systems that will deal with clutter eventually, but I haven't traveled far down that road yet. I'm really dying to get a quick document/receipt scanner, so I can just scan things like mail in, and organize it on the computer.

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mirage29
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posted August 16, 2013 10:36 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for mirage29     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Randall:
I make a mess when I eat.

Oh no! .... that's a really crummy story! The worst!

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Randall
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posted August 18, 2013 02:49 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote

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Randall
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posted August 19, 2013 05:09 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Is organized clutter actually clutter?

quote:
Originally posted by AcousticGod:
I'm a strange mix of clutter and cleanliness. When my wife was gone last weekend, there wasn't any clutter added to the house, but at the same time my desk and office are generally more cluttered than hers. She often clutters the kitchen, and I go behind and deal with the aftermath.

I've always been prone to clutter...because there's no place for everything to go. I imagine creating systems that will deal with clutter eventually, but I haven't traveled far down that road yet. I'm really dying to get a quick document/receipt scanner, so I can just scan things like mail in, and organize it on the computer.


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