Is Multitasking Real? What Neuroscience Actually Says
Do you also keep telling yourself that you can multitask seamlessly? You hear people around you proudly saying, "I multitask, and I can manage it." You try to multitask between working, replying to emails, and scrolling social media and simultaneously try to finish an assignment, all while listening to music. Do you also believe that multitasking is real?
When you see yourself doing this, you feel productive, but the brain is not truly multitasking. In fact, your brain is switching rapidly between all these tasks. It is simply flickering from one object to another like a spotlight. When you try to multitask, your brain shifts its focus; it momentarily loses context and efficiency. Therefore, the results are more effort, more mistakes, and less creativity.

The Myth of True Multitasking
At most times, multitasking becomes completely unreliable when the two tasks at hand use the same mental system. For instance, when one tries to read and write at the same time, and both depend heavily on language and working memory. However, when you try to use the same cognitive region for two different tasks, you’re not splitting attention cleanly, instead you’re forcing two streams through the same narrow cognitive channel.
Therefore, in such cases, your brain doesn’t fail because you’re not trying hard enough; it fails because the tasks are competing for the same limited processing space.
The Brain’s Bottleneck - Attention
One of the easiest ways to understand this is to imagine attention as your budget for spendings. You either choose to spend all your budget on a single task and get a high-quality outcome. Or you choose to split it across tasks and get several low-quality outcomes. Your brain tries to “borrow” attention for short bursts, which is why multitasking feels possible for a few minutes. However, the cost shows up later as fatigue, irritability, and slower thinking. This delayed cost is cost is why people often underestimate how much multitasking drains them.
The Brain’s Limits: One Focus at a Time
The brain’s control center is the prefrontal cortex. It manages decision-making and planning, and it can consciously focus on only one demanding task at a time.
If you are doing two things and both of them need attention, for instance, like writing a report while you are checking your phone. Your brain cannot process both these tasks together. Instead of processing them in parallel, it rapidly alternates between them, a process called task-switching.
This constant switching between tasks activates the neural circuits in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC - the conflict monitoring system) and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), which in turn increases cognitive load and causes fatigue.
In simple words, multitasking doesn’t make your brain faster; instead, it makes it busier. Multitasking failure has been described by neuroscientists using the dual process models, where fast attention-switching replaces sustained executive control.
Costs of Task Switching: Attention Residue
When your brain keeps switching between tasks it creates what researchers often call an “attention residue.” Even if you have returned back to your main task at hand, a part of your brain is still stuck with the previous task. It can be a message that you read, the tab you left open or a reel that you saw. These tiny interruptions cause a residue and in turn this reduces the working memory availability. Thus, you're thinking feels shallow immediately after interruptions. You make look at your work at hand and feel like your brain is buffering.
This effect gets amplifies when the switch involves something emotionally stimulating like social media, urgent messages, or a conflict. The brain now starts treating the emotionally loaded content as important and it remains active in the background. Therefore, even one quick check into the distraction can carry a longer cognitive shadow than you expect.
Multitasking and Working Memory:
The tendency of making small mistakes increases due to working memory overload. For example, missing a word while typing, forgetting a step while solving a problem, sending a message without reading it twice. These tiny mistakes are not big flaws, instead they are predictable outcomes of a system with a limited mental capacity. When the brain is forced to hold too many things beyond its capacity, it drops something, and you only notice after the fact.
Why Does Multitasking Feel Rewarding?
If multitasking is so inefficient, why do we love it? The answer lies in dopamine, the brain’s reward neurotransmitter.
Each new notification, message, or task switch provides a tiny hit of dopamine giving a false sense of productivity and excitement. Over time, this leads to a dopamine feedback loop, training the brain to seek novelty instead of depth.
This mechanism is similar to what drives social media addiction constant stimulation but shallow engagement. The mechanism is very similar to what drives social media addiction. This causes constant stimulation but shallow engagement.

I had done my thesis on multitasking ..true name was, Examining the Impact of Multitasking on Attention and EEG Patterns: A Comparative Study Using Standardized Cognitive and EEG Measures. The data showed that when people multitask, their brains are more stimulated and they performance declines in whatever multitask they are doing.
Yes. I am also conveying the same thing. Thanks for your review.