Etienne Koechlin, a neurologist at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM), said the findings showed that the brain splits in two when faced with two goals at the same time.
When the scientists asked the study participants to attempt another task,
they found that the participants often forgot one of the three tasks they were asked to perform.
The participants also made three timeas many errors as when they only attempted two tasks.
55.5%
of the participants did not answer correctly twice

Did not answer correctly twice

Second single observation, answer the red ball correctly

Answer both the red and green balls correctly on the first try
The people who didn't get all the red and green balls right
were asked to count the number of red balls again, and 35% of them succeeded.
This can be preliminarily classified
Mono-Fumbler

Mono-Adept

Poly-Adept
