Question
What is the "vigilance decrement," and why does it justify taking breaks while you study?
Answer
Sustained attention naturally degrades the longer you stay on one task — a brief break restores both performance and motivation.
Your ability to concentrate is not a flat line you can hold indefinitely; it erodes with time-on-task. This is the vigilance decrement, first studied in radar operators who missed more signals the longer their watch ran. The practical upshot is that pushing through hour after hour of unbroken study yields diminishing returns — accuracy drops and effort feels heavier.
Short breaks reset that decrement. They may also give the brain a moment to begin consolidating what you just studied. So breaks aren't a reward for work; they're part of the mechanism that keeps the work effective.
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