Why Am I So Easily Distracted? | Dr. Sydney Ceruto — MindLAB Neuroscience
Why Am I So Easily Distracted? The Neuroscience of a Miscalibrated Salience Network Key Takeaways Distractibility is a miscalibrated salience network, not a character defect — the anterior insula learns to tag low-value stimuli as urgent. The brain’s attention architecture is a four-network handoff: salience, central executive, default mode, and ventral attention — distraction happens when the handoff breaks. Chronic digital load does not destroy focus capacity; it lowers the importance-threshold so that pings compete with priorities as equals. Mechanism overlap with ADHD is real, but trait distractibility in an otherwise-typical brain is usually acquired salience drift, not a structural catecholamine phenotype. Attention is trainable — vigilance, top-down control, and insula-ACC coupling all respond to progressive, mechanism-targeted intervention. You are not broken. In twenty-six years of practice, I have never met a client whose focus capacity was truly gone. What has changed — reliably, across every demographic I see at MindLAB Neuroscience — is the calibration of the brain’s importance-detector. Your salience network now tags a Slack ping and a child crying with nearly identical urgency, and that is the real problem. ...
