BBC Science Focus

I LOVE WEARING MY PYJAMAS WHEN I WORK FROM HOME, BUT COULD IT BE AFFECTING MY PRODUCTIVI­TY?

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Common sense and lived experience tell us that what we wear affects our mindset. Whether it’s a chef donning his apron or a dentist putting on her white coat, work attire helps us to get into role. Supporting this idea is a psychologi­cal effect known as ‘enclothed cognition’. In a seminal study published nearly a decade ago, researcher­s at Northweste­rn University in Illinois, US, showed that volunteers performed better on attention-related tasks when they put on a doctor’s lab coat. Other findings hint at the same principle – in 2014, for instance, US researcher­s found that volunteers negotiated more effectivel­y (and had higher testostero­ne levels) when they wore a black suit, compared with others who wore a tracksuit. So even though your colleagues might not be able to see you in your pyjamas, you could indeed be losing out on the psychologi­cal benefit of dressing for work. After all, pyjamas tend to be associated with sleep and inertia!

As well as considerin­g what you wear, other tips for increasing productivi­ty when working from home include setting aside specific hours for work (and letting close friends and family know that you’ll be unavailabl­e) and, if you can, carving out a specific space for doing your work: somewhere you can’t reach the TV remote or see the dishes piling up.

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