Pathological lying may stem from an unusual imbalance of brain matter,
say scientist at the University of Southern California. Working with
senior investigator, doctoral student Yaling Yang scanned the brains
of 12 self-described pathological liars as well as other volunteer who
had no history of deception. Yang was surprised to find that the
liars� brains had 22 percent more white matter in the prefrontal
region that governs decision-making and judgment. So-called white
matter makes up the wiring among neurons, which are sometimes
collectively called gray matter.

Pathological lying can be very complicated. People who do so must
present information that appears correct and yet harbors easier
falsehoods. �It may just be easier for them to tell lies,� Yang 
says,
because the excessive white mater creates an abundance of connections
among otherwise contradictory, compartmentalized data. Further studies
are needed to determine if the fabricators are born with more white
matter or develop it as result of the frequent fibbing.

Other scientist who have done functional MRI scans of people lying in
real time also point to excessive activation in the prefrontal lobes
and say the pattern of activity can serve as reliable detectors of
deception. If so, scanners could one day move from the lab bench to
the court bench.


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra

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