🧠 Where Do Your Random Thoughts Come From?
New research is uncovering the mystery of your wandering mind
Have you ever been surprised by a thought that popped into your head?
Pause for a moment and think of any old memory. Try to settle on an event from at least a year ago. It could be literally anything.
Now consider why that thought emerged in your head rather than any other one.
Did you come up with a childhood memory? If so, why did your brain search so far back? Did you replay a scene from work? Why not your personal life? Was it a happy or unhappy memory? Why not the opposite? When I asked you to settle on an “event” earlier, did that word “event” unconsciously nudge your mind toward one memory rather than another?
This kind of mental detective work might drive you a little mad, so you don’t need to spend too long on it. The point is we’re frequently unable to understand the inner workings of our own minds. Thoughts seem to come from nowhere, and we don’t have a strong sense of conscious control over them. You only become aware of a thought after your brain has already surfaced it, and the processes that led to that surfacing are often unconscious and unknown.
Although the origins of any single thought remain mysterious, researchers are starting to understand some of the influences that predict which thoughts are generally prioritized in a person’s mind. So let’s dive into what the latest research is showing.
💭 How to track a wandering mind
In a study published in June 2024, researchers Mildner & Tamir at Princeton came up with a clever way of tracking the spontaneity of people’s emerging thoughts. They recruited 1679 participants and asked them to think out loud for two minutes, either verbally on an audio recording or by typing.
More specifically, they told participants:
“Report your thoughts and feelings as they come to you. Try to talk continuously during the entire time. Don’t worry about grammar or complete sentences. If your thoughts or feelings recur over and over, simply say them over and over”
And perhaps most importantly:
“Remember that we are interested in your saying any and all thoughts and feelings that come to you no matter how silly or personal you think they may be.”
Using computerized language processing models, they then analyzed the transcripts and broke them down into different topics and units of thought. On average, participants had 10.82 thoughts across 5.6 topics in each 2-minute transcript.
The researchers were particularly interested in how people’s minds jumped from one topic to another, and they tested between two major theories for why we have spontaneous thoughts:
Optimizing memory efficiency: This hypothesis suggests spontaneous thoughts help us to replay, process, and solidify meaningful past experiences in our memories. A good example might be when a disagreement we had with someone a few days ago suddenly comes to mind. Our brains are working out how to handle and store that emotional information in case we need it later.
Prioritizing current concerns: This hypothesis suggests spontaneous thoughts help us to bring important background concerns to mind so that we stay on track toward achieving our goals. A good example might be when we’re reading a book and our mind wanders toward the presentation we need to give at work tomorrow. It might be an annoying distraction, but our brain is trying to ensure we’re prepared for an upcoming priority.
To work out which theory is better supported by the data, the researchers looked at which type of information was most relevant when people’s thoughts jumped from one topic to another. Did spontaneous thoughts change based on levels of experiential detail during memory processing, or did they change based on levels of concern-related information?
⏭️ When do thoughts jump from one topic to another?
Both of the theories above were consistent with the data, but they expressed themselves in different ways.
Right before people’s minds jumped from one topic to another, their thoughts decreased in levels of experience-based detail. When participants started thinking about a past experience in their life, their thoughts contained a lot of detail about that event. But as they processed that event more fully in their memory, the level of detail in their emerging thoughts declined, and their minds became more likely to jump to another topic worth processing.
In contrast, people’s thoughts increased in levels of concern-related information right before jumping topic. This was an unexpected pattern, but consider what happens when your mind is drawn to an important and often anxiety-inducing priority in your life. Unlike when you suddenly recall a vivid past experience in your mind’s eye, your concern might instead intrude on other thoughts you’re having and then gradually build itself up into becoming the main topic of thought!
After jumping topics, concern-related information decayed again, just as with experience-based detail. After all, we can’t forever think about the same concern without our minds exploding. But the contrasting profiles in leading up to a new thought are interesting, and they show that our minds don’t wander in a simple one-dimensional way. There could be many reasons for a particular thought to overwhelm other thoughts and emerge in our conscious minds, and their journeys in getting to consciousness could look very different.
At the very least, our wandering minds are interested in both optimizing our memory efficiency and reminding us about the concerns in our lives. Whether pleasant or unpleasant, spontaneous thoughts—and even intrusive thoughts occasionally—do serve a function. Without them, we’d likely be struggling to remember past experiences, missing important deadlines, and failing to prioritize important issues that deserve our attention.
⭐️ Takeaway tips
Mind-wandering breaks are a good thing: In a world full of content, it has become unusual and even a bit daunting to sit and do nothing. But giving your mind a break to rest or wander as it pleases isn’t as boring as it sounds, and it may even be useful if it helps with the adaptive functions of spontaneous thought. You don’t always need to be locked into focusing on a particular task. Allow your mind the freedom to roam occasionally!
- recently wrote a great short post about the joy of sitting and doing nothing
Catch yourself in a spontaneous thought: Most of our spontaneous thoughts probably go unnoticed as we distract ourselves with daily chores and activities. But it’s an interesting philosophical exercise to actually pay attention to what it means for a thought to be spontaneous. Do you know what your next thought is going to be? In a conversation, are you conscious of which word will come out of your mouth next? How long does an individual thought stick around? Where do your thoughts go after that? This kind of self-reflection will help you realize the fascinating spontaneity within your own mind, and it’s also the basis of many mindfulness practices.
Be more forgiving: It’s tough being human and we all make mistakes. When you notice how spontaneous many of your thoughts, feelings, perceptions, intentions, and desires are, it can help you to interpret other people’s behaviors in the same way. We’re often good at seeing our own mistakes as momentary lapses of focus that don’t represent our broader selves. We can practice being just as generous with the people around us.
“The mind which does not have a place to turn or any stable base will undergo change from hour to hour and from minute to minute due to the variety of its distractions. ... By the things that come to it from outside it will be continually transformed.”
~ John Cassian (c. 360-435 AD)
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📬 I love to hear from readers so please leave a comment below and let’s start a conversation!
👋 Until next time,
Erman Misirlisoy, PhD
Love this post, and thank you for the mention.
I've been thinking lately that faculty in life largely comes from understanding what your brain/biology is trying to do without your explicit sanction, and where thoughts come from and what they're trying to do is an important part of that that I never had any real insight into other than just trying to watch it as it randomly comes up with things... This really helps me fill in a piece of that puzzle, thank you!!!
Let go of wandering thoughts. Those are not the thoughts you want to have. Quiet the mind.