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Examples

  • The term "supertasker" is given to individuals able to successfully accomplish two or more tasks at once -- a quality possessed by less than 2.5 percent of people.

    Small Number Of Adults 'Supertaskers,' Study Finds 2010

  • The term "supertasker" is given to individuals able to successfully accomplish two or more tasks at once -- a quality possessed by less than 2.5 percent of people.

    Small Number Of Adults 'Supertaskers,' Study Finds 2010

  • Co-author James Watson, PhD, says they used the term "supertasker" to describe multitasking ability.

    WebMD Health 2010

  • "Yet, clearly they do, so we use the 'supertasker' term as a convenient way to describe their exceptional multi-tasking ability."

    BusinessWeek.com -- 2010

  • The term "supertasker" is given to individuals able to successfully accomplish two or more tasks at once-a quality possessed by less than 2.5 percent of people.

    The Daily Utah Chronicle RSS 2010

  • The lesson is that while 1/40th of the population falls under the "supertasker" category, the number that

    Medlogs - Recent stories 2010

  • The term "supertasker" is given to individuals able to successfully accomplish two or more tasks at once-a quality possessed by less than 2.5 percent of people.

    The Daily Utah Chronicle RSS 2010

  • First, salmon are allowed to run with impunity; next, you get hit by some yogurt slinger on his cellphone who taps a bevy of "experts" to testify in court that he's a medically certified "supertasker" and that he was not responsible for crushing your hopes, dreams, and bones into so much walnut topping.

    The Salmon Defense: Against the Current, Down the River BikeSnobNYC 2010

  • First, salmon are allowed to run with impunity; next, you get hit by some yogurt slinger on his cellphone who taps a bevy of "experts" to testify in court that he's a medically certified "supertasker" and that he was not responsible for crushing your hopes, dreams, and bones into so much walnut topping.

    Archive 2010-03-01 BikeSnobNYC 2010

  • That's what Daphne Bavelier, a professor in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at the University of Rochester, thinks might be occurring in the supertasker equivalents she has seen in her lab.

    TIME.com: Top Stories 2010

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