The brain and the body

If it is true that we have long compared the brain to a computer, Alan Jasanoff, professor of biological engineering at MIT, explains why we must go further in this description which is, at least, incomplete. Read more

To speak… to connect

To come in contact with another individual can be perceived as a challenge, for some. When one considers that what is required can be neurologically taxing, could it be that this is more challenging for some than others?

What is required when addressing someone is twofold:

  • Looking at them straight in the eyes;
  • Speaking.

It appears to scientists that this is not so easy as one may think.

Scientists from Kyoto University, Japan, in 2016, tested 26 volunteers. When asked to make eye contact, the participants found it harder to come up with links between words.

The volunteers took longer to think of words when they were making eye contact, but only when difficult word associations were involved.

To add to this, in an effort to understand what is happening, in 2015, Italian psychologist Giovanni Caputo demonstrated that staring into someone else’s eyes for just 10 minutes induced an altered state of consciousness. Participants saw hallucinations of monsters, their relatives, and even their own faces.

A process called neural adaptation whereby our brains gradually alter its response to a stimulus that doesn’t change could explain this. You simply start to feel less of the stimulus since it is the same, ongoing.

This could be what’s happening in the case of the volunteers making eye contact.

Either way, one can think that if oculo-motor control is optimal, for once, it could be easier to engage, while thinking!

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010027716302360

 

 

 

Inhibition: or how to not do

It’s interesting to me that, if curious or involved in performance, we think in terms of what we do, what we could do, what we can do and, but of course, what we should do. Read more