I wish I was joking!
If all the radios around you are tuned to non-overlapping channels (1,6, 11) and you look "down the spectrum through time" you have 3 distinct bands that all the radios can tune and demodulate easily. When people use an intermediate channel like 3, it doesn't get them away from the channel 1 signal so much as it fills in the spectrum that makes the neighbor channels tunable. Intermediate channels just interfere with 2 channeles, it doesn't get you clear of either. Tuning is difficult when the spectrum is filled out without separation, it's like trying to listen to a distant flute concerto while you're in the shower.
The best way I know to really tune your wireless environment: Run Kismet on a linux laptop in one window, and run Wi-spy Chanelyzer in a vmware unity windown next to it. The USB wispy works perfectly in a virtual machine, and you can correlate the Kismet traffic to the radios you see in the spectrum graph. Makes it real obvious what the problems are, and what the best solutions will be, assuming you have good solutions available. In a crowded environment, the unregulated microwave spectrum can be a noisy mess, but until you see what a radio sees, your actions are likely to be little better than random changes.
By the way, you can't really trust your wireless card to give you a good picture of the spectrum. It misses all noise that is not its own protocol, it tunes 1 channel at a time and scans and samples slowly, and even when it recognizes a signal the strength that it reports to the driver may not be calibrated in a meaningful way.
"All my life I wanted to be someone; I guess I should have been more specific." -- Jane Wagner