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CONCEPT

Forty-Seven Seconds

Gloria Mark 's empirical measurement of the average duration a knowledge worker sustains attention on a single screen — down from two and a half minutes in 2004, and the number that anchors her AI-era diagnosis.
Forty-seven seconds is the empirical finding that crystallizes two decades of Mark's observational research on knowledge workers. Obtained through painstaking shadowing, task logging, and second-by-second measurement, it describes how long the average person now sustains attention on a single screen before switching. The trajectory — from 150 seconds in 2004 to 47 seconds by the early 2020s — predates the AI revolution but is accelerated by it. The number's power lies not in drama but in its resistance to narrative: it describes what is measurable, regardless of what workers believe about their own focus. In the AI-augmented workflow, where pauses between engagements shrink toward zero, the floor threatens to drop out entirely.
Forty-Seven Seconds
Forty-Seven Seconds

In The You On AI Field Guide

The number emerged from Mark's methodology of direct field observation rather than self-report. Workers shadowed by her research team consistently described themselves as focused for long stretches, occasionally distracted. The measurement showed something else: fragmentation at a cadence the workers

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