[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":334},["ShallowReactive",2],{"footer-articles-en":3,"how-to-focus-articles":25,"how-to-focus-seo":114},[4,7,10,13,16,19,22],{"slug":5,"title":6},"best-study-environment","The Science of Study Environments: Where You Study Matters",{"slug":8,"title":9},"caffeine-and-studying","Caffeine and Studying: What the Science Actually Says",{"slug":11,"title":12},"cornell-note-taking-method","The Cornell Note-Taking Method: Complete Guide for Students",{"slug":14,"title":15},"digital-minimalism-students","Digital Minimalism for Students: Focus in a Distracted World",{"slug":17,"title":18},"digital-vs-handwritten-notes","Digital vs. Handwritten Notes: What the Research Actually Says",{"slug":20,"title":21},"flow-state-studying","How to Enter a Flow State While Studying",{"slug":23,"title":24},"how-sleep-affects-learning","How Sleep Affects Learning and Memory: The Science Students Need to Know",[26,39,50,62,70,80,87,94,104],{"slug":27,"title":28,"subtitle":29,"description":30,"image":31,"author":32,"date":35,"tags":36,"_path":38},"how-to-focus-when-studying","How to Focus When Studying: 12 Science-Backed Methods","Practical strategies to eliminate distractions and enter deep concentration","Struggling to focus while studying? Discover 12 evidence-based techniques to improve concentration, eliminate distractions, and study more effectively.","/images/how-to-focus-when-studying.png",{"name":33,"image":34},"Lukas von Hohnhorst","/images/lukas.jpg","2026-01-17",[37],"Focus","/blog/en/how-to-focus-when-studying",{"slug":40,"title":41,"subtitle":42,"description":43,"image":44,"author":45,"date":46,"tags":47,"_path":49},"deep-work-with-athenify","Deep Work for Students: Focus in a Distracted World","How to achieve deep focus and double your productivity","Learn how deep work helps students achieve better grades. Discover strategies to eliminate distractions, build concentration, and maximize study sessions.","/images/deep-work.png",{"name":33,"image":34},"2025-02-18",[37,48],"Athenify","/blog/en/deep-work-with-athenify",{"slug":51,"title":52,"subtitle":53,"description":54,"image":55,"author":56,"date":57,"tags":58,"_path":61},"pomodoro-technique-complete-guide","The Pomodoro Technique: A Complete Guide for Students","Master the time-tested method used by millions to boost focus and beat procrastination","Master the Pomodoro Technique with this complete guide. Discover the science behind 25-minute focus sessions and how to adapt the method for deep work.","/images/pomodoro-timer.png",{"name":33,"image":34},"2025-12-01",[59,37,60],"Study Techniques","Time Management","/blog/en/pomodoro-technique-complete-guide",{"slug":20,"title":21,"subtitle":63,"description":64,"image":65,"author":66,"date":67,"tags":68,"_path":69},"The neuroscience of total immersion and how to trigger it on demand","Learn how to enter a flow state while studying. Discover the science behind flow, the conditions that trigger it, and practical techniques to achieve deep immersion consistently.","/images/flow-state.png",{"name":33,"image":34},"2026-02-08",[37,59],"/blog/en/flow-state-studying",{"slug":71,"title":72,"subtitle":73,"description":74,"image":75,"author":76,"date":67,"tags":77,"_path":79},"how-to-study-without-phone","How to Study Without Your Phone (And Why You Should)","Practical strategies for separating from your phone and reclaiming your focus","Learn how to study without your phone and why it is the single most impactful change for your focus. Practical strategies for phone-free studying that actually work.","/images/study-without-phone.png",{"name":33,"image":34},[37,78],"Study Habits","/blog/en/how-to-study-without-phone",{"slug":8,"title":9,"subtitle":81,"description":82,"image":83,"author":84,"date":67,"tags":85,"_path":86},"The evidence-based guide to using caffeine strategically without wrecking your sleep","Learn how caffeine actually affects your brain, the optimal dose for studying, when to stop drinking coffee, and why timing matters more than quantity.","/images/caffeine.png",{"name":33,"image":34},[37],"/blog/en/caffeine-and-studying",{"slug":14,"title":15,"subtitle":88,"description":89,"image":90,"author":91,"date":67,"tags":92,"_path":93},"Reclaim your attention by deliberately choosing which technologies deserve your time","Discover how digital minimalism helps students focus better, study more effectively, and reclaim hours lost to mindless scrolling. Practical strategies you can start today.","/images/digital-minimalism.png",{"name":33,"image":34},[37,78],"/blog/en/digital-minimalism-students",{"slug":95,"title":96,"subtitle":97,"description":98,"image":99,"author":100,"date":101,"tags":102,"_path":103},"focus-music-studying-guide","Best Focus Music for Studying: A Science-Based Guide [With Videos]","What to listen to (and avoid) for maximum concentration—with embedded recommendations","Discover the best music for studying based on science. From lo-fi beats to brown noise, learn what actually helps focus—and what secretly sabotages your concentration.","/images/focus-music.png",{"name":33,"image":34},"2026-01-08",[37],"/blog/en/focus-music-studying-guide",{"slug":105,"title":106,"subtitle":107,"description":108,"image":109,"author":110,"date":111,"tags":112,"_path":113},"adhd-study-tips","ADHD Study Tips: Proven Study Habits & Strategies That Actually Work","How students with ADHD can build effective study habits, overcome time blindness, and stay motivated","ADHD study tips that work with your brain, not against it. Practical strategies for time blindness, focus, Pomodoro, gamification, and building lasting study habits.","/images/adhs-timetracking.png",{"name":33,"image":34},"2025-12-09",[60,37],"/blog/en/adhd-study-tips",{"id":115,"title":116,"body":117,"description":147,"extension":327,"meta":328,"navigation":329,"path":330,"seo":331,"stem":332,"__hash__":333},"seo/seo/how-to-focus.md","The science of focus (and how to achieve it)",{"type":118,"value":119,"toc":316},"minimark",[120,125,144,151,155,164,169,173,188,196,200,221,227,231,246,253,257,272,279,283,299,303,312],[121,122,124],"h2",{"id":123},"why-focus-is-your-most-valuable-academic-resource","Why focus is your most valuable academic resource",[126,127,128,129,137,138,143],"p",{},"Cal Newport's research on deep work demonstrates that concentrated, uninterrupted effort produces results that are not just incrementally better -- they are categorically superior to anything achieved through scattered, distracted work. For students, this has profound implications. The student who can sit down and genuinely focus for 90 minutes will learn more, retain more, and produce higher-quality work than a peer who spends three hours in a state of continuous partial attention. Yet most students have never been taught how to focus. Schools test knowledge but rarely train the cognitive skill that makes acquiring knowledge possible. The result is a generation of learners who are brilliant but perpetually distracted, capable of extraordinary output but unable to access the deep concentration required to produce it. Understanding that focus is a trainable skill -- not a fixed personality trait -- is the first step toward transforming your academic performance. Our guide on ",[130,131,136],"a",{"href":132,"className":133},"/blog/how-to-focus-when-studying",[134,135],"text-link","font-bold","how to focus when studying"," breaks down the practical steps to get started. When you invest in building your ",[130,139,142],{"href":140,"className":141},"/study-habits",[134,135],"study habits"," around deep focus, you create a compounding advantage that grows stronger with every session.",[145,146,148],"pull-quote",{"author":147},"",[126,149,150],{},"90 minutes of deep, focused study produces more learning than 3 hours of distracted cramming.",[121,152,154],{"id":153},"the-neuroscience-of-attention-and-distraction","The neuroscience of attention and distraction",[126,156,157,158,163],{},"Your prefrontal cortex manages working memory, filters irrelevant stimuli, and sustains concentration on a chosen task. But it operates on limited neurochemical resources, primarily glucose and specific neurotransmitters like dopamine and norepinephrine, which deplete with use. Every time you switch tasks -- checking a notification, glancing at social media, responding to a text -- your prefrontal cortex must disengage from the current task, store its context, load the new task's context, and re-engage. Research from the University of California, Irvine found that it takes an average of 23 minutes and 15 seconds to fully return to the original task after an interruption. This is not a minor inconvenience; it is a catastrophic drain on productive time. A single distraction during a 50-minute study session can effectively cut your deep work time in half. Meanwhile, adenosine -- a byproduct of neural activity -- accumulates throughout the day, creating the sensation of mental fatigue. Caffeine works by blocking adenosine receptors, temporarily masking tiredness. But caffeine has a half-life of approximately 5--6 hours, meaning that a coffee at 2 p.m. still has half its stimulant effect at 8 p.m., potentially disrupting the sleep that is essential for consolidating what you learned during the day. Understanding these mechanisms allows you to work with your brain's biology rather than against it. Adopting a ",[130,159,162],{"href":160,"className":161},"/blog/digital-minimalism-students",[134,135],"digital minimalism approach"," can help you reduce the neurological toll of constant device switching.",[165,166],"stats-box",{"label":167,"number":168},"time needed to fully refocus after a single distraction","23 min 15 sec",[121,170,172],{"id":171},"practical-strategies-for-eliminating-distractions","Practical strategies for eliminating distractions",[126,174,175,176,181,182,187],{},"You will never out-willpower a buzzing phone. A landmark study published in the Journal of the Association for Consumer Research found that the mere presence of a smartphone on your desk reduces available cognitive capacity, even when the phone is face-down, on silent, and you are not consciously thinking about it. The only solution is physical separation: put your phone in another room before you begin studying. This single change can dramatically improve your concentration. Beyond your phone, audit your digital environment ruthlessly. Install a website blocker like Cold Turkey or Freedom and block social media, news sites, and entertainment platforms during your ",[130,177,180],{"href":178,"className":179},"/study-timer",[134,135],"study sessions",". Close every browser tab that is not directly relevant to your current task. Each open tab is a tiny open loop demanding a sliver of your attention. Your physical ",[130,183,186],{"href":184,"className":185},"/study-environment",[134,135],"study environment"," matters equally. Choose a consistent location that you associate exclusively with focused work -- never your bed, ideally not even your leisure space. Face a wall or window rather than a doorway. Use noise-cancelling headphones or earplugs if you cannot control ambient sound. Disable all notifications on your computer, including email. The goal is to engineer a space where distraction requires deliberate effort and focus is the default state.",[189,190,193],"info-box",{"title":191,"type":192},"The Single Highest-Impact Change","tip",[126,194,195],{},"Put your phone in another room before studying. Not on silent. Not face-down. In another room. A 2017 study in the Journal of the Association for Consumer Research found that a smartphone's mere presence reduces available cognitive capacity, even when it is turned off.",[121,197,199],{"id":198},"the-pomodoro-technique-and-time-boxed-focus","The Pomodoro technique and time-boxed focus",[126,201,202,203,208,209,214,215,220],{},"The ",[130,204,207],{"href":205,"className":206},"/pomodoro-timer",[134,135],"Pomodoro technique",", developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s, is deceptively simple: work for 25 minutes, take a 5-minute break, repeat. After four cycles, take a longer 15--30 minute break. The brilliance of the 25-minute interval is psychological. Almost anyone can commit to focusing for just 25 minutes -- it feels achievable even when the task feels overwhelming. This dramatically lowers the barrier to starting, which is often the hardest part for students who ",[130,210,213],{"href":211,"className":212},"/stop-procrastinating",[134,135],"struggle with procrastination",". The timer also creates gentle urgency: knowing the clock is running discourages dawdling. As your focus fitness improves, you can extend the intervals. Many experienced practitioners work in 50-minute blocks with 10-minute breaks, which aligns well with university lecture schedules. Advanced deep workers often use 90-minute sessions, which match the brain's natural ultradian rhythm -- the roughly 90-minute cycle of higher and lower alertness that governs sustained cognitive performance. The ",[130,216,219],{"href":217,"className":218},"/fullscreen-timer",[134,135],"fullscreen timer"," mode is particularly powerful for time-boxed focus because it eliminates visual distractions completely, filling your entire screen with the countdown.",[222,223,224],"side-note",{},[126,225,226],{},"The standard 25/5 Pomodoro interval is a starting point, not a rule. Some students find 50/10 or even 90/20 more effective. Experiment with interval lengths and adapt to your own rhythms and the demands of different tasks.",[121,228,230],{"id":229},"flow-state-the-peak-of-focus","Flow state: the peak of focus",[126,232,233,234,239,240,245],{},"Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi spent decades studying what he called \"optimal experience\" -- moments when people become so absorbed in your work that time seems to warp, self-consciousness dissolves, and performance reaches its peak. Csikszentmihalyi's decades of research identified several conditions that make flow more likely. First, the task must be challenging enough to fully engage your skills but not so difficult that it causes anxiety -- this is the \"challenge-skill balance.\" Second, you need clear goals and immediate feedback, so you know what you are working toward and whether you are making progress. Third, you need an uninterrupted environment, because flow states typically require 15--20 minutes of sustained focus to initiate and are instantly shattered by interruptions. For students, flow is most accessible during tasks that match your skill level: solving practice problems at the edge of your ability, writing a paper on a topic you understand well enough to engage deeply, or coding a project that stretches but does not overwhelm your current knowledge. The ",[130,235,238],{"href":236,"className":237},"/focus-timer",[134,135],"focus timer"," helps create the conditions for flow by providing structure while removing distractions, allowing you to settle into the deep concentration that precedes this peak state. For a deeper exploration of how to reliably access this powerful mental mode, read our guide on ",[130,241,244],{"href":242,"className":243},"/blog/flow-state-studying",[134,135],"achieving flow state while studying",".",[189,247,250],{"title":248,"type":249},"The Challenge-Skill Balance","info",[126,251,252],{},"Flow state requires a specific balance: the task must be challenging enough to engage you fully, but not so difficult that it causes anxiety. If material is too easy, increase the challenge (try practice problems instead of re-reading). If it is too hard, break it into smaller components.",[121,254,256],{"id":255},"common-focus-mistakes-students-make","Common focus mistakes students make",[126,258,259,260,265,266,271],{},"Five focus mistakes show up so consistently among students that they deserve to be called out individually. The single most destructive is the multitasking myth -- believing you can study effectively while texting, watching videos, or monitoring social media. Neuroscience is unambiguous: the human brain cannot perform two cognitively demanding tasks simultaneously. What feels like multitasking is actually rapid task-switching, and each switch carries a cognitive cost that compounds over time. The second mistake is studying with your phone on your desk. Even if you never touch it, peer-reviewed studies confirm that its visible presence alone reduces your available working memory. Third, many students skip breaks entirely, grinding through marathon sessions in the belief that more hours equal more learning. In reality, your prefrontal cortex fatigues after sustained effort, and working through exhaustion produces diminishing returns and poor-quality encoding. Fourth, caffeine timing is frequently mismanaged -- drinking coffee in the late afternoon provides short-term alertness at the cost of disrupted sleep, which devastates the next day's focus and prevents overnight memory consolidation. Finally, students often study in environments optimized for comfort rather than concentration, choosing beds, couches, or noisy cafes over dedicated workspaces -- if you do study in shared spaces, our ",[130,261,264],{"href":262,"className":263},"/blog/focus-music-studying-guide",[134,135],"guide to focus music for studying"," can help you create an auditory cocoon. One powerful antidote to isolated grinding is ",[130,267,270],{"href":268,"className":269},"/blog/body-doubling-study-technique",[134,135],"body doubling as a study technique",", where simply working alongside another person provides the social accountability your brain craves. Fixing these mistakes can transform your academic productivity.",[189,273,276],{"title":274,"type":275},"Multitasking Is a Myth","warning",[126,277,278],{},"Your brain does not parallel-process — it rapidly switches between tasks, losing efficiency with each switch. Every time you check a notification, you pay a cognitive tax that takes over 20 minutes to recover from. Single-tasking is not a limitation; it is a superpower.",[121,280,282],{"id":281},"how-athenify-trains-your-focus","How Athenify trains your focus",[126,284,285,286,289,290,294,295,298],{},"Every feature in Athenify exists to reduce friction between you and sustained concentration. The ",[130,287,219],{"href":217,"className":288},[134,135]," eliminates visual distractions completely, replacing your entire screen with a clean, beautiful countdown that keeps you anchored to your current session. The ",[130,291,293],{"href":205,"className":292},[134,135],"Pomodoro mode"," provides structured 25-minute intervals with built-in breaks, perfect for building initial focus endurance. Session tracking lets you log every study block, revealing patterns in your concentration: when you focus best, how long you can sustain attention, and which subjects demand more mental energy. Over time, you can set progressive duration goals -- moving from 25-minute sessions to 50-minute blocks to full 90-minute deep work sessions as your focus fitness grows. The ",[130,296,238],{"href":236,"className":297},[134,135]," adapts to your chosen session length, providing the structure and accountability that make consistent practice possible. Combined with distraction-free design and motivational tracking, Athenify turns focus training from an abstract intention into a concrete daily practice.",[121,300,302],{"id":301},"building-a-daily-focus-practice","Building a daily focus practice",[126,304,305,306,311],{},"If you can only concentrate for 15 minutes before your mind wanders, then 15 minutes is your starting point. There is no shame in that -- it is simply your current baseline, and baselines exist to be improved. Begin with one or two focused sessions per day at your current capacity. Add five minutes per week. This gradual extension prevents the frustration and burnout that come from attempting to force 90-minute ",[130,307,310],{"href":308,"className":309},"/blog/deep-work-with-athenify",[134,135],"deep work sessions"," before you have built the necessary cognitive endurance. Consistency matters far more than duration: four 25-minute sessions spread across the week will build your focus faster than a single desperate 3-hour marathon. Track every session so you can see your progress over time -- watching your average session length increase from 15 to 25 to 45 to 90 minutes is deeply motivating and reinforces the habit. Pair your focus practice with the same time, the same location, and the same pre-session routine each day to leverage the power of contextual cues and habit formation. Within weeks, sitting down to focus will feel natural rather than effortful. Within months, deep concentration will become your default working mode -- and the academic results will follow.",[313,314],"blog-promo",{"text":315},"Train your focus with Athenify's study timer",{"title":147,"searchDepth":317,"depth":317,"links":318},2,[319,320,321,322,323,324,325,326],{"id":123,"depth":317,"text":124},{"id":153,"depth":317,"text":154},{"id":171,"depth":317,"text":172},{"id":198,"depth":317,"text":199},{"id":229,"depth":317,"text":230},{"id":255,"depth":317,"text":256},{"id":281,"depth":317,"text":282},{"id":301,"depth":317,"text":302},"md",{},true,"/seo/how-to-focus",{"title":116,"description":147},"seo/how-to-focus","dkm_9yaQ2nNzodV793G0LGIr0rYdiMeH0Q37M7At01Y",1782461814546]