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Ask HN: Intelligence and the time of day
5 points by glynjackson on July 23, 2014 | hide | past | favorite | 7 comments
I'm aware that a lot of scientific individuals read HN. I would like to take this opportunity to ask for feedback/possible explanations relating to intelligence and the time of day.

I'm a developer, I seem to solve most of my problems first thing in the morning between 7am-10am. During the first 3-4 hours of the day I solve most of my problems, problems I couldn't decipher the night before. I have asked other developers if they experience the same issue and most concur.

Is this a real phenomenon? Is there a scientific explanation for this?

I would love to find a way to extend my morning problem solving skills to the rest of the day.



Do you eat breakfast? If so, how much? Do you then not eat lunch into 12-1 o'clock? It may have to do with diet as well as sleep. I find eating snacks throughout that time, and drinking a decent amount of water helps keep me in that zone for a while longer.


I may keep a diary and try to eat small and often. I don't really have breakfast at all. First meal is always after 11am.


Have you considered that your diet and exercise routines may have a greater impact on your cognitive abilities than sleep? Can you provide more information on your daily routine?


Good point, no, I haven't considered that. I eat breakfast late due to my work routine. If I'm working from home I get up have coffee around 6.30am then work until around 11.30 before getting breakfast. If I'm at the office I up around 5.30, get coffee at the station around 6.30am. I then work on the train until I get in the office around 8.30am I don't eat in this time at all. Maybe I should just not eat, seems I work better without food.


The issue probably has something to do with the fact that you don't eat. Assuming that your last meal comes sometime between 7-10pm, that means you're going 13-16 hours without food. It's likely that body directs all energy to digesting food and then recovering from your 'starvation'.

I am not a nutritionist but try eating something small, first thing in the morning, maybe some nuts or a smoothie.


Have you tried a 15 minute power nap?


It takes me around 30 to fall asleep. Tried it once, made me feel a lot worse. Is this something you do?




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