My name is Noam Scheiber, and I am a New York Times reporter covering white-collar workers and the ways that economic trends and new technologies are affecting their work lives.
As employers become more precise in measuring productivity, many workers are focusing on improving their job performance.
Some are trying to boost the functioning of their brains and nervous systems — for example, by tracking their sleep quality or heart rate variability through an Apple Watch and trying to improve them. Or by taking certain supplements that can heighten cognitive performance.
If you’ve engaged in so-called biohacking to help you think more clearly and do your job better, I’d like to hear from you.
I’ll read every response and won’t include your name or identifying details in a story unless I have contacted you first and received your permission. I won’t share your contact information outside of our newsroom.
Noam Scheiber is a Times reporter covering white-collar workers, focusing on issues such as pay, artificial intelligence, downward mobility and discrimination. He has been a journalist for more than two decades.
The post Are You ‘Biohacking’ to Perform Better at Work? We Want to Hear From You. appeared first on New York Times.




