Constancy

From OptimalScience
Revision as of 18:58, 22 May 2020 by 10.181.29.40 (talk) (→‎Key Claims)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Key Claims

  • Constancy concerns training your predictive attention to serve your task attention in continuing the engagement with the task.
  • Constancy is how you shape your predictive attention to pull your task attention through the task (time).
  • Constancy’s matter is the transition from step to step within a task.
  • Deliberate effort by task attention to carry out strategy decreases as the strategy becomes habituated into the predictive attention.
  • Constancy shapes strategies over time.
  • Working well with a given strategy makes that strategy more salient, allowing predictive attention to pull you through it more easily.
  • Mastery is when your predictive attention is fully trained to follow a strategy without the need for ongoing deliberation by task attention.
  • Flow is the result of task attention being pulled according to strategy through the task by predictive attention.
  • Flow is the most rewarding state, so it gives strategy the most salience.
  • Flow leads to the fastest attainment of mastery.
  • Constancy allows you to attain and maintain the state of flow.
  • Habituation of distractors is the work of constancy. Happens in flow most easily.
  • Hyperfocus is when task attention follows a strong (highly incentivized) pull from your predictive attention down a path that it did not deliberately set.
  • Hyperfocus has high salience but without the guidance of deliberately crafted strategies.
  • Automation is the opposite of constancy: a series of steps without deliberation.
  • Automation happens when distractors have been sensitized.
  • Automation sensitizes distractors.
  • Automation is the same thing as tunnel vision caused by cravings.
  • All growth attained in work is attributable to constancy.
  • Perceived effort in the task is when your task attention faces uncertainty in how to order your predictive attention.
  • Constancy reduces perceived effort to zero. (Aka, “effortless attention” or flow.) (As does hyperfocus.)