The brain is built to multitask, as long as the tasks require different
types of perception. Some scientists have proposed that when the brain
processes information from any sense, those data are then converted to
an abstract code. This �code central� theory helps to explain
how we transfer rules learned through one sense to another.



But it also suggests that we should be prone to mixing up information
coming in from two senses at once because they would both be reduced to
the same code. To test that prediction, Christopher Conway
<http://www.cs.nyu.edu/%7Ecconway>   of Indiana University
<http://www.indiana.edu>   and Morten Christiansen
<http://www.psych.cornell.edu/people/Faculty/mhc27.html>   of Cornell
University <http://www.cornell.edu>   evaluated how well people could
discern complex patterns in sequences of objects on a computer screen or
sounds played through headphones. The sounds or objects appeared based
on two complex sets of invented rules, also known as
�grammars.�

Subjects were able to learn either grammar when it was presented by
itself, through visual or auditory training. Code central theory would
predict that when the two grammars were presented in the same learning
session through different senses, subjects should be unable to
distinguish between them. But that wasn�t the case.

Instead they identified a grammar as correct only if it was presented
through the same sensory stimuli in which it was learned. Surprisingly,
people learned the grammars just as well whether they were presented one
at a time or two at a time through different senses-excellent news for
multitaskers. But performance plummeted if both grammars were presented
with very similar stimuli, for example, two sets of abstract shapes or
two sets of invented words.


Happy Learning,

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

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