This finding related to the US political system. People who describe
themselves as being politically liberal can better suppress a habitual
response when faced with situations in which that response is incorrect,
according to research that used a simple cognitive test to compare
liberal and conservative thinkers. Tasks that require such "conflict
monitoring" also triggered more activity in the liberals'
anterior cingulate cortex, a brain region geared to detect and respond
to conflicting information.



Past research has shown that liberals and conservatives exhibit
differing cognitive styles, with liberals being more tolerant of
ambiguity and conservatives preferring more structure. The new paper
"is exciting because it suggests a specific mechanism" for that
pattern, comments psychologist Will Cunningham of Ohio State University
<http://www.osu.edu>  , who has not involved with the study. In the
experiment, subjects saw a series of letters flash quickly on a screen
and were told to press a button when they saw M, but not W. Because M
appeared about 80 percent of the time, hitting the button became a
reflex-and the more liberal-minded volunteers were better able to avoid
the knee-jerk reaction.

The study's lead author, psychologist David Amodio
<http://www.psych.nyu.edu/amodio>   of New York University
<http://www.nyu.edu>  , emphasizes that the findings do not mean that
political views are predetermined. "There are lot of steps between
conflict monitoring and political ideology, and we don't know what
those steps are," he says. Although the neurocognitive process his
group measured is so basic that it is most likely in place in early
childhood, he notes " the whole brain is very malleable." Social
relationships and other environmental factors also shape one's
political leanings.


Happy Learning,

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


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