A recent experimental study published in Psychological Research challenges long-held stereotypes about sex differences in multitasking abilities by revealing a nuanced behavioral distinction rather than general cognitive superiority. Researchers André and Diana Szameitat, supported by the Bial Foundation, developed an innovative multitasking paradigm that simulates real-life scenarios to investigate whether men and women differ significantly in managing multiple tasks concurrently.
Multitasking, the skill of simultaneously performing or switching between tasks, is a common demand in everyday life—spanning contexts from driving to workplace activities. While cultural assumptions suggest women excel at multitasking, scientific evidence has remained inconclusive, often showing minor or inconsistent sex-based differences. To address this, the researchers engaged 78 participants (41 men and 37 women) in a complex task battery designed to mimic realistic situations, including kitchen recipe following, phone-number searching, number-letter matching, word monitoring, and a conversational component requiring responses to personal questions every 20 seconds.
Intriguingly, the study found no significant sex differences in performance across the cognitive visual-manual tasks. Both men and women responded with comparable speed and accuracy. However, a striking divergence emerged in the conversational task: men omitted conversational engagement more than twice as often as women. This pattern suggests that while multitasking ability, per se, is not sex-dependent, men may deprioritize social interaction during multitasking contexts.
To ascertain whether this behavior influenced external perceptions, a second study enlisted 160 uninformed observers who evaluated recorded performances. Observers consistently rated men as less competent multitaskers, perceiving them as less in control, less alert, and less engaged compared to their female counterparts. This perceptual bias aligns with the communicative engagement difference noted in the conversational task.
The authors propose evolutionary theories as a tentative explanation, positing that women’s greater communicative behavior in social settings could underpin this disparity. Nonetheless, this hypothesis remains speculative as it was not directly tested in the study.
By differentiating multitasking ability from conversational engagement under multitasking conditions, this research provides a fresh perspective on gender stereotypes. It suggests that persistent public beliefs about women’s superior multitasking may be rooted in observable social interaction patterns rather than fundamental cognitive differences.
As André Szameitat summarizes, the critical sex difference lies not in multitasking skill broadly, but in the frequency and consistency of maintaining conversational engagement under concurrent task demands. This insight elucidates how social behaviors contribute to gendered perceptions of cognitive performance in everyday multi-demand environments.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Men talk less than women during multitasking
News Publication Date: 15-May-2026
Web References: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00426-026-02279-5
Keywords: Psychological science, Behavioral psychology, Human social behavior, Socialization, Stereotypes, Gender studies

