This is what your brain does when you’re not doing anything
This is what your brain does when you’re not doing anything
- March 3, 2024
- Nora Bradford, cognitive sciences graduate student, explains in this piece for WIRED
Whenever you're actively performing a task—say, lifting weights at the gym or taking a hard exam—the parts of your brain required to carry it out become “active” when neurons step up their electrical activity. But is your brain active even when you’re zoning out on the couch?
The answer, researchers have found, is yes. Over the past two decades they’ve defined what’s known as the default mode network, a collection of seemingly unrelated areas of the brain that activate when you’re not doing much at all. Its discovery has offered insights into how the brain functions outside of well-defined tasks and has also prompted research into the role of brain networks—not just brain regions—in managing our internal experience.
Read on, courtesy of WIRED: https://www.wired.com/story/what-your-brain-is-doing-when-youre-not-doing-anything/?mbid=social_twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_brand=wired&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=twitter
-----
Would you like to get more involved with the social sciences? Email us at communications@socsci.uci.edu to connect.
Share on:
Related News Items
- Human brains found at archaeological sites are surprisingly well-preserved
- This is what your brain does when you're not doing anything
- Attending the National Conference for Black Political Scientists
- Scientists debate how and if animals talk to us - even if we understand them just fine
- The changing bilingual brain
connect with us