Y12W06VC Energy over time
You've had days when you had plenty of time and got almost nothing done. You've had other days when you had very little time and did genuinely good work. The difference wasn't the hours. It was something else. This week's article examines what research on human performance suggests about the real unit of productivity — and why managing time, on its own, has never been quite the right target.
Core Vocabulary
capacity
/kəˈpæsɪti/|ca·pac·i·ty
n
The maximum amount that can be held, produced, or absorbed; the ability to perform.
Word Breakdown: cap- (hold/contain, Latin) + -acity (capacity or ability)
Word family: capacities (n.)
Synonyms: ability, capability, maximum
Collocations: cognitive capacity, working capacity, at capacity
Example: Peak hours provide greater cognitive capacity.
diurnal
/daɪˈɜːrnəl/|di·ur·nal
adj
Occurring daily or in the daytime; relating to a 24-hour cycle.
Word Breakdown: di- (day, Latin) + urn- (related to day) + -al (relating to)
Word family: diurnally (adv.)
Synonyms: daily, daytime
Collocations: diurnal cycle, diurnal rhythm
Example: Diurnal patterns shape energy and performance.
cognitive
/ˈkɑːɡnɪtɪv/|cog·ni·tive
adj
Relating to thinking, reasoning, or mental processes.
Word Breakdown: cog- (know, Latin) + -nit- (knowing) + -ive (relating to)
Word family: cognition (n.), cognition (n.)
Synonyms: mental, intellectual
Collocations: cognitive performance, cognitive capacity, cognitive demand
Example: Cognitive work requires energy alignment.
deplete
/dɪˈpliːt/|de·plete
vb | [depletes, depleted, depleting]
To reduce reserves; exhaust or use up.
Word Breakdown: de- (away from, Latin) + ple- (fill)
Word family: depletion (n.), depleted (v.)
Synonyms: exhaust, drain, reduce
Collocations: deplete resources, deplete willpower
Example: Continuous work depletes energy without recovery.
renewable
/rɪˈnjuːəbəl/|re·new·a·ble
adj
Able to be restored, replenished, or made new again.
Word Breakdown: re- (again, Latin) + new (fresh) + -able (capable of)
Word family: renewal (adj.), renew (n.)
Synonyms: restorable, replaceable, sustainable
Collocations: renewable energy, renewable resource
Example: Energy is renewable through proper recovery.
yields
/jiːldz/|yields
vb | [yields, yielded, yielding]
Produces as a return or result; generates output.
Word family: yield (n.)
Synonyms: produces, generates, returns
Collocations: yield results, yield output
Example: Quality sleep yields better cognitive performance.
peaks
/piːks/|peaks
vb | [peaks, peaked, peaking]
Reaches its highest point; comes to a maximum.
Word family: peaked (v.)
Synonyms: maximises, crests, climbs
Collocations: reach peak, at peak performance
Example: Cognitive capacity peaks at specific times.
sustained
/səˈsteɪnd/|sus·tained
adj
Continued over time without interruption; maintained throughout a period.
Word Breakdown: sus- (under, Latin) + tain- (hold)
Word family: sustain (n.), sustainability (n.)
Synonyms: prolonged, continuous, ongoing
Collocations: sustained effort, sustained work
Example: Sustained work without recovery produces diminishing returns.
Technical Terms
ultradian rhythm
/ʌlˈtrædiən ˈrɪðəm/|ul·tra·di·an.rhy·thm
noun phrase
Biological cycles shorter than a day (roughly 90-120 minutes for cognitive peaks and troughs).
Synonyms: intra-daily cycle, high-frequency biorhythm, within-day pattern
Collocations: ultradian rhythm research
Example: Many people experience an energy dip around 2 PM each afternoon, reflecting an ultradian rhythm that recurs multiple times daily.
cognitive bandwidth
/ˈkɑːɡnɪtɪv ˈbændwɪdθ/|cog·ni·tive.band·width
noun phrase
Mullainathan and Shafir's concept of limited mental capacity for decisions and tasks.
Synonyms: mental capacity, attentional resources, cognitive load
Collocations: cognitive bandwidth limited
Example: When facing financial stress, a person's cognitive bandwidth shrinks, reducing their capacity to focus on work or personal relationships.
decision fatigue
/dɪˈsɪʒən fəˈtiːɡ/|de·ci·sion.fa·tigue
noun phrase
The deteriorating quality of decisions after extended decision-making.
Synonyms: choice exhaustion, judgment deterioration, diminishing decision quality
Collocations: decision fatigue accumulates
Example: A retailer's sales drop late in the day because customers suffer decision fatigue after choosing among thousands of products.
chronotype
/ˈkroʊnətaɪp/|chro·no·type
noun
An individual's biological preference for activity timing (morning, intermediate, evening type).
Synonyms: circadian preference, sleep-wake timing, biological time orientation
Collocations: chronotype preference, identify your chronotype
Example: A person who is naturally a morning person (an early chronotype) struggles to stay alert at evening meetings, reflecting their biological sleep preference.
deep work
/diːp wɜːrk/|deep.work
noun phrase
Newport's term for cognitively demanding, focused work requiring full mental engagement.
Synonyms: focused engagement, distraction-free effort, high-concentration labor
Collocations: deep work practice, engage in deep work
Example: A software engineer blocks out five uninterrupted hours without email or messaging to write complex code, engaging in deep work away from distractions.
Figurative Phrases
run out of steam
Lose energy or motivation. Idiom from steam engines.
Etymology/Type: Metaphor from steam engines; steam powered them, so running out of steam is losing energy or motivation.
Synonyms: lose momentum, hit a wall, run low on energy
Example: By the fourth hour of study, she ran out of steam and couldn't retain anything she was reading.
hit the wall
Reach sudden exhaustion. Idiom from endurance running.
Etymology/Type: Idiom from endurance running; runners who suddenly lose energy and cannot continue are said to "hit the wall".
Synonyms: reach your limit, crash, run out of energy suddenly
Example: He hit the wall mid-afternoon every day until he shifted his hardest work to the mornings.
recharge your batteries
Restore energy. Metaphor; humans don't literally charge.
Etymology/Type: Metaphor; batteries store energy and must be recharged—humans recharge by resting or recovering.
Synonyms: recover your energy, rest and recover, restore your capacity
Example: Taking a proper lunch break to recharge your batteries turns out to be more productive than grinding through.
peak hours
Times of best performance. Idiom; 'peak' is figurative for persons.
Etymology/Type: Idiom; "peak" is figurative for the highest point, so peak hours are times of best performance or demand.
Synonyms: prime time, optimal hours, best performance window
Example: She identified her peak hours as nine to eleven in the morning and scheduled all her hardest thinking then.
burn the candle at both ends
Exhaust through over-engagement. Idiom; no literal candle.
Etymology/Type: Metaphor; burning a candle from both ends consumes it twice as fast—exhaustion from overcommitment.
Synonyms: overextend yourself, push yourself too hard from all sides, sacrifice rest for activity
Example: Studying late at night while waking early for sport, she was burning the candle at both ends and it showed in her focus.
running on empty
Depleted. Idiom from fuel gauges.
Etymology/Type: Idiom from fuel gauges; the gauge reads "empty" when a tank is depleted—metaphor for being depleted.
Synonyms: running on fumes, completely depleted, operating past your limits
Example: After a week of late nights before exams, he was running on empty — the words on the page barely registered.
Confusing Words
capacity vs. capability
Both relate to what's possible, but capacity is about the maximum amount available while capability is about what skills or abilities someone possesses.
- Capacity means the maximum amount that can be held, processed, or produced; a limit or maximum threshold — your cognitive capacity determines how much mental work you can do in a given time; hours with high capacity are vastly more productive than hours when you're depleted.
- Capability means the ability, skill, or potential to do something; what is within your power to accomplish — a junior engineer may have the capability to write code but lack the organizational capacity to manage a whole project.
If you're talking about *how much* or *at what maximum level*, use capacity. If you're talking about *what skills or abilities someone has*, use capability.
diurnal vs. nocturnal
Both describe activity patterns tied to day and night, but diurnal means active during daylight while nocturnal means active at night.
- Diurnal means active, occurring, or relating to the daytime; happening during daylight hours — humans are naturally diurnal creatures, with peak cognitive performance typically occurring in morning hours.
- Nocturnal means active, occurring, or relating to nighttime; happening during darkness — owls are nocturnal predators, hunting while most other animals sleep.
If something is active or occurs during the *day*, use diurnal. If something is active or occurs during the *night*, use nocturnal. Think of the 'd' in diurnal for 'daytime'.
cognitive vs. intellectual
Both relate to thinking, but cognitive describes mental processes and functions while intellectual describes capacity for reasoning and learning.
- Cognitive refers to mental processes, functions, and abilities like memory, attention, processing, and perception — cognitive capacity is your mental resource pool at any given moment, shaped by sleep, nutrition, and exercise.
- Intellectual refers to the capacity for reasoning, understanding complex ideas, learning, and scholarly thought; often suggests sophistication and academic ability — an intellectual approach to problem-solving means engaging rigorous, abstract reasoning.
If you're discussing *mental processes and functions* (memory, attention, perception), use cognitive. If you're discussing *reasoning capacity or scholarly thinking*, use intellectual.
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