Most conversations about protecting attention begin from the same premise: that concentration is threatened by interruption, and that the remedy is building a habit of eliminating whatever might interrupt it. All the notifications must be blocked, all the open tabs must be closed and the buzzing phone should be on “do not disturb” mode.
This premise, though intuitive, rests on an assumption worth examining, which is that a device only competes for the mind’s resources when it is actively being used. A growing body of research on attention and self-control suggests otherwise. An object does not need to be touched, glanced at or even unlocked to draw on the mind’s limited capacity. Its mere presence can be enough.
This is the habit worth naming, precisely because it looks so unremarkable: leaving the phone within reach, in view, on the desk, in the pocket, while attempting to do work that requires real concentration. It is a habit almost no one thinks to examine, since nothing about it resembles the more obvious markers of distraction. No app is opened. No message is read. And yet the evidence suggests that this seemingly neutral arrangement is doing more to undercut sustained attention than most people realize.
The Habit Of Keeping The Phone Within Reach
A 2017 study published in the Journal of the Association for Consumer Research put this question to a direct test. Marketing psychologist Adrian Ward and colleagues at the University of Texas at Austin asked participants to complete a series of demanding cognitive tasks, the kind that require the brain’s full working memory to perform well, while their own smartphones were placed either on the desk in front of them, in a pocket or bag, or in an entirely separate room.
Critically, the phones were silenced throughout, so no notification could serve as an actual distraction. The original finding was a steady decline in available cognitive capacity as the phone became more physically present, with performance worst on the desk and best when the phone was left in another room, and the pattern held even among participants who successfully resisted the urge to check their device.
That said, the finding has not held up in quite as clean a form since. A 2023 meta-analysis published in Media Psychology, which pooled dozens of follow-up studies, found the effect was real but considerably smaller and more selective than the original experiment suggested, showing up reliably only in tasks that lean heavily on working memory, with little measurable cost to sustained attention or self-control.
Two other meta-analyses conducted around the same time went further, finding no significant effect at all once results were pooled across cognitive domains. None of this erases the original finding, but it does mean the fairest current summary is more modest than the first headlines suggested: a phone’s visible presence appears to tax one specific, narrow slice of cognitive function, not a person’s overall capacity to think.
The mechanism Ward and his colleagues themselves proposed centers on attentional control rather than on the broader idea, sometimes called ego depletion, that resisting any temptation draws down a single shared reserve of willpower.
That broader claim is worth flagging on its own, since a large 2016 replication effort published in Perspectives on Psychological Science — 24 labs, more than 2,100 participants — failed to reproduce it, and the idea of self-control as one depletable resource is now considered shaky at best.
The narrower version, the one specific to a visible phone, holds up better: resisting the pull toward the device still requires the mind to actively inhibit an automatic urge, and that inhibition draws on the same limited pool of attentional resources the task in front of a person actually needs.
A related dynamic, described in a 1994 study published in Psychological Review by social psychologist Daniel Wegner, offers a useful parallel despite being an older theory. Wegner called it ironic process theory: the deliberate effort to keep a thought out of mind requires an unconscious monitoring process that periodically checks whether the thought has returned, and that ongoing monitoring consumes cognitive resources of its own.
This particular piece of the theory, the ongoing cost of monitoring, has held up reasonably well in more recent experiments, especially those involving cognitive load. Its more famous prediction — that a suppressed thought comes roaring back once the suppression ends — has fared considerably worse in recent large-scale reanalyses, which found the “rebound” was inconsistent across studies and partly attributable to publication bias. The article’s point rests on the sturdier half: a phone sitting in view does not have to be checked to occupy a share of working memory. Simply being available to be checked appears to be enough.
What makes this pattern especially easy to overlook is that it does not register subjectively as a distraction at all. A person working with their phone face-down on the desk typically feels every bit as focused as someone with no phone nearby, because their conscious attention genuinely is on the task in front of them. The cost is not experienced; it is simply subtracted, quietly, from the total pool of cognitive resources available for the work itself. This may explain why so much conventional advice about focus leaves people still underperforming relative to their sense of effort. The notification was never the whole story. The object’s proximity was doing damage on its own.
What This Habit Reveals
The broader lesson here concerns where self-discipline is best applied. It is tempting to think of focus as a matter of willpower exercised in the moment, the strength to resist reaching for the phone once the urge to check it arises.
But the research, read carefully and alongside its more recent complications, suggests something more modest and more useful: that attention is better protected by arrangement than by resistance. If simply not checking a nearby phone still draws on the same finite reserve of attentional control needed for demanding work, then the more effective intervention is not a stronger resolve to ignore the device, but a change in its proximity, made once, before the task begins.
This reframes the whole notion of what counts as a distraction. The competitor for attention is not always the thing that interrupts a task in progress; sometimes it is the mere possibility of interruption, sitting quietly within arm’s reach, asking nothing of conscious awareness while still drawing on the mind’s deeper resources.
Recognizing that difference does not require faulting anyone for checking their phone too often. It requires recognizing that the fight against distraction is very often lost before it begins, not in a moment of weak resolve, but in the ordinary decision, made without much thought, to keep the phone close at hand.
Think a silenced phone sitting on the desk can’t touch your focus? Find out how much your own phone habits are quietly stealing your attention with this science-backed test: Phone Distraction (Phubbing) Test











