Skip to content
Mental Health, Science

New study reveals why your mind sometimes goes blank

Monash University 3 mins read

Have you ever lost all attention to what’s going on around you, been lost for thoughts or grasping at memories?  These are all symptoms of ‘mind blanking’, a common experience with a wide variety of definitions ranging from feeling drowsy to a complete absence of conscious awareness.

Now, a team of neuroscientists and philosophers from Europe and Monash University have published a paper in the journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences compiled of what we know about mind blanking, including insights from their own work observing people’s brain activity.

“During wakefulness, our thoughts transition between different contents. However, there are moments that are seemingly devoid of reportable content, referred to as mind blanking,” the team say.

While they say it remains unclear what these blanks represent, author Dr Jennifer Windt of Monash University’s Centre for Consciousness and Contemplative Studies, says a mind blank is more likely to occur when the brain is in a high- or low-arousal state.

"Even when we are trying to focus on what we are doing, our attention frequently drifts away from ongoing tasks and the here and now," Dr Windt said.

"Moreover, when our attention lapses, we can experience a variety of mental states, such as daydreaming and freely moving thoughts, or even no thoughts at all, as in mind blanking."

Fellow author Antoine Lutz of the Lyon Neuroscience Research Center in France said, “Our aim here is to start a conversation and see how mind blanking relates to other seemingly similar experiences, such as meditation.” 

Coordinating author Athena Demertzi of GIGA Research at University of Liège, Belgium said, “We sought to better understand mind blanking by parsing through 80 relevant research articles — including some of our own in which we recorded participants’ brain activity when they were reporting that they were ‘thinking of nothing’.’’ 

Key findings from the research include:

  • Mind blank frequency varies greatly between different people, but a person experiences the phenomenon about 5 to 20 per cent of the time on average. 

  • Common experiences defined as ‘mind blanking’ include lapses of attention, memory issues and a cessation of inner speech, among others.

  • Mind blanks tend to happen toward the end of long, sustained attention tasks like exams and after sleep deprivation or intense physical exercise, but are also a typical waking state.

 

  • Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) report mind blanking more frequently than neurotypical people.  

  • During mind blanks after sustained attention tasks, people’s heart rates and pupil sizes decreased and their brains showed lower signal complexity — a state typically observed in unconscious people. During the blank, they observed disruptions in sensory processing and slow, sleep-like EEG waves. The authors describe these states in which parts of a person’s brain appear asleep as “local sleep episodes”. 

The researchers speculate that the common factor between different forms of blanking may be related to changes in arousal levels, leading to a malfunction of key cognitive mechanisms such as memory, language or attention.

Given that blanking experiences vary so greatly — both in terms of people’s subjective experiences and their neural activity — the researchers propose a framework that describes mind blanking as a dynamic group of physiologically driven experiences mediated by arousal states, or a person’s state of physiological “vigilance”. 

Lead author Thomas Andrillon, a former Research Fellow in Psychology at Monash, now at the University of Liège, says: “We believe that the investigation of mind blanking is insightful, important and timely. Insightful because it challenges the common conception that wakefulness involves a constant stream of thoughts. Important  because mind blanking highlights the interindividual differences in subjective experience.’’

To view the research paper, please visit: https://www.cell.com/trends/cognitive-sciences/fulltext/S1364-6613(25)00034-8

- ENDS -


GENERAL MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Monash Media

T: +61 (0) 3 9903 4840

E: [email protected]

For more Monash media stories, visit our news and events site

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 17/12/2025
  • 07:56
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health

Summer Mozzie Warning – Ross River Virus risk linked to warmer temperatures

17 December 2025 - Australians are being urged to prevent mosquito bites this summer, after research mapping studies from across the country found that warmer temperatures heighten the risk of Ross River Virus outbreaks, especially inriverland and coastal regions. The scoping review, led by the University of Adelaide, and published today in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, also uncovered a knowledge gap when it comes to understanding the impact of temperature on Ross River Virus notifications within inland Australia. Ross River Virus is a common mosquito-borne diseases in Australia, with around 3,000 cases reported annually. It…

  • Mental Health, Youth
  • 16/12/2025
  • 07:30
UNSW Sydney

Helping young adults rethink uncertainty reduces anxiety and depression: study

Finding uncertainty hard to tolerate is linked to poorer mental health among young adults, and a short course addressing this has shown promising results. A single 20 to 30-minute online course can help young adults become more tolerant of uncertainty and less anxious and depressed, a study led by UNSW Sydney psychologists has found. And the improved mental health effects were still evident at least a month after completing the course. The study, which was published today in the journal Psychological Medicine, comes at a time when young adults face persistent uncertainty – from the pandemic to global instability to…

  • Mental Health
  • 15/12/2025
  • 15:16
Lifeline Australia

LIFELINE SCALES UP RESPONSE TO SUPPORT ANYONE IN DISTRESS FOLLOWING BONDI BEACH TERROR ATTACK

Key Facts: Bondi Terror Attack Wellbeing Support GuideLifeline is reminding all Australians that if they’re feeling distressed or overwhelmed following the terror attack at Bondi Beach on 14 December 2025, they are not alone. Lifeline CEO Graham Strong said the organisation had issued an urgent call out to boost the number of Crisis Supporters on shift on Sunday night and had been overwhelmed by the scale of the response which meant Lifeline was able to provide immediate specialised support. “Lifeline acknowledges theimmense impact of the tragic terror attack at Bondi Beach on Sunday, not only on those who were directly…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.