Our minds are built to wander, according to a new study that argue we
have a network of brain regions dedicated to meandering thoughts that
turns off and on depending on how focused we need to be to complete
different tasks.



Previous studies have shown that this "default" network, which
is composed of at least seven separate brain regions, kicks in anytime
we are at rest-say, passively taking in a TV show or a sunset. But the
function of letting our gray matter go gallivanting has been unclear.

Now Malia F. Mason <http://barlab.mgh.harvard.edu/mason.htm>   of
Harvard Medical School <http://hms.harvard.edu>   and her colleagues
have found that dull or unchallenging tasks switch on the default
network. They scanned the brains of several subjects while their memory
of short sequences of letters was being evaluated. When tested on
familiar set of letters that the subjects had been trained on for days
boring their daydreaming networks switched into overdrive. But when they
had to focus on sorting out new combinations of letters, the network
fell quiet. This pattern matched each person's own reports of when
his or her mind wandered from the tasks.

"We're constantly doing things that are pretty mundane,"
Mason says. She points out that daydreaming is not always frivolous:
"Most people say they're planning or thinking about the future,
and that's extremely adaptive."

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primastudy.wordpress.com>
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>


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