Using electrophysiological measurements, the researchers could identify specific changes in
brain patterns when the volunteers were mind wandering.
Not exact matches
It showed enhanced activity in sections of the
brain responsible for willfulness and memory — much different
patterns than
when people were merely fantasizing about a desired future.
Patterns in beasts» acts are the sole witness to a design by irony inspired:
when scientists mapped how the neurons fired in the cortex of the
brain when learning, on - screen a melody was coldly burning.
Scientists at the University of California discovered that
when rats experience something new, their
brains show new
patterns of activity.
The three symbols that bind the
brain,
when taken together, represent religious thought
patterns.
The straightforward experimental implication is that the correlation between
brain wave
patterns and neural impulse
patterns should be lower
when a person is engaged in creative thought than
when engaged in routine activity like adding numbers.14
For instance, suppose that experiment after experiment showed that
brain wave
patterns deviate most from
patterns of neural activity
when people are making what look like free choices.
When the third trimester hits, large - scale linking up of neurons commences, and regular
brain wave
patterns become measurable.
Our
brains love it
when those
patterns emerge.
When a
pattern of response is generalized like this it most likely indicates that the child's
brain has now been wired so that the child becomes more hesitant and fearful of various things they are exposed to in their environment.
By analysing the
patterns of
brain activity
when volunteers read or listened to sentences containing hard - to - detect semantic anomalies - words that fit the general context even though they do not actually make sense - the researchers found that
when a volunteer was tricked by the semantic illusion, their
brain had not even noticed the anomalous word.
When researchers looked at their
brain activity during these times, they saw that one hemisphere of the
brain had electrical
patterns resembling nighttime sleep, whereas
patterns from the other hemisphere indicated wakefulness.
When the team examined donated
brains from deceased people, they found similar
patterns.
When Muotri's team examined donated
brains from deceased people with these disorders, they found similar
patterns.
The treatment group showed notable changes in the ability to identify and remember faces, which was corroborated by changes in
brain patterns that arise
when study participants saw a familiar face.
The data showed that
when the cell phone was transmitting, the power of a characteristic
brain - wave
pattern called alpha waves in the person's
brain was boosted significantly.
When the same image was processed subconsciously, the researchers found that the
patterns of
brain activity were much more variable.
That is because
when the
brain thinks about moving both arms at once, the activity is not merely a sum of what you might see if you moved each arm individually, but a completely different
pattern.
When the program detected a
pattern in the monkey's
brain signalling the intention to move, it moved the virtual hands in the corresponding direction.
The real - life eye contact prompted
brain patterns similar to those seen in the video experiment:
When eyes met, brain activity fell in sync; when eyes wandered, brain activity didn't match as clos
When eyes met,
brain activity fell in sync;
when eyes wandered, brain activity didn't match as clos
when eyes wandered,
brain activity didn't match as closely.
It is done using electrodes placed in the
brain, which recognise specific
patterns of electric activity that occur
when a person thinks about moving.
When activated, sensors inside would scan the thousands of
brain waves oscillating in a soldier's head; a microprocessor would apply
pattern recognition software to decode those waves and translate them into specific sentences or words, and a radio would transmit the message.
When a small subset dies, the
pattern of activity that the olfactory processing regions in the
brain receives for a specific smell doesn't change very much.
«
When we learn, at first the
brain tends to not produce new activity
patterns, but to repurpose the activity
patterns it already knows how to generate,» says Aaron Batista, an associate professor in the Department of Bioengineering at the University of Pittsburgh.
«
When faced with a new task, we're finding that the
brain is constrained to take the neural activity
patterns that it's capable of generating right now and use them as effectively as possible in this new task.»
The study, led by the Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest Health Sciences, found that younger and older adults show very different
brain wave
patterns when performing the same memory task.
The technology, part of an 18 - month, $ 2.4 million Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) undertaking, relies on electroencephalography (EEG) to detect the cascade of neural firing
patterns in your
brain when you spot something novel or interesting, even if you're unaware of it.
The new study is an example of what happens
when epidemiology experiments — studies of
patterns in health and disease — crash into studies of
brain imaging.
When the researchers analysed the activity in an area of the
brain that is important for the production of song — an area known as nucleus RA — they found a clear correlation between its activity
pattern and the occurrence of the «stack» call.
When they examined these participants»
brain images, one
pattern in particular stuck out: People who got earworms more often had a thinner right frontal cortex, which is involved in inhibition, and a thinner temporal cortex, which processes sensory stimuli like sound.
ELECTRICAL shocks that simulate the
patterns seen in the
brain when you are learning have enhanced human memory for the first time, boosting performance on tests by up to 30 per cent.
In this case, the
brain is picking bits from each eye that make «sense» as a holistic
pattern when combined correctly.
This may help the
brain design unique
patterns when similar actions are performed in different environments.
Researchers think these resting - state
patterns reflect how the
brain typically operates
when we interact with the world.
Imaging studies have shown that
when autistic children see a familiar face, their
pattern of
brain activation is different from that of normal children.
For example, neural excitation is thought to induce form constants, the dynamic
patterns I saw
when I closed my eyes under the influence of peyote; these are also generated by migraines, epileptic seizures, and other
brain disorders.
When multiple maps are overlaid,
patterns begin to emerge that show how different regions of the
brain activate specific and often discrete complements of genes.
The analysis allowed the researchers to identify and isolate the specific
patterns of neural activity that play out in this part of the
brain when someone speaks, effectively enabling them to decode the
brain's signals.
When comparing methylation
patterns in the
brains of workers and queens, they found no overall differences.
Also, the
patterns of
brain activity that we see on imaging
when they are lying down may not be the
patterns that the
brain produces during normal upright activity.»
Resting state networks (RSNs), sometimes called the «dark energy of the
brain», are
patterns of low - frequency
brain activity that are constantly active, even
when a person is asleep.
However, the same algorithm that helps our
brain track motion can be tricked by the
pattern motion of an object, such as the seams on a spinning baseball, which causes our
brain to «see» the ball suddenly drop from its path
when, in reality, it curves steadily.
Such
brain patterns, Barrett says, are just statistical summaries, not unique signatures that exist only
when someone has a certain experience.
«The
pattern of activity in a
brain region involved in spatial learning in the virtual world is completely different than
when it processes activity in the real world,» said Mayank Mehta, a UCLA professor of physics, neurology and neurobiology in the UCLA College and the study's senior author.
«
When you move the game controller in exactly the right way to earn that high score, your
brain remembers how it executed that action — which neurons get switched on, and in what
pattern — so your
brain can recreate that same move the next time you play,» said Dr. Costa, who also a professor of neuroscience and neurology at Columbia University Irving Medical Center.
His reputation was cinched
when Stephen Colbert, on Comedy Central's Colbert Report, asked Pinker to explain how the
brain works in exactly five words, and he replied, «Brain cells fire in patterns.&r
brain works in exactly five words, and he replied, «
Brain cells fire in patterns.&r
Brain cells fire in
patterns.»
Later,
when the rats were asleep and their
brain waves indicated that they had entered the stage in which humans normally dream, these same electrical
patterns appeared.
When played neutral - sounding statements, females showed additional sustained increases in brain activity around 1000 milliseconds after the start of the speech — a pattern that has previously been shown to occur when making judgements incorporating extra informat
When played neutral - sounding statements, females showed additional sustained increases in
brain activity around 1000 milliseconds after the start of the speech — a
pattern that has previously been shown to occur
when making judgements incorporating extra informat
when making judgements incorporating extra information.
An international research team led by Carnegie Mellon University has found that
when the
brain «reads» or decodes a sentence in English or Portuguese, its neural activation
patterns are the same.
This image compares the neural activation
patterns between images from the participants»
brains when reading «O eleitor foi ao protesto» (observed image) and the computational model's prediction for «The voter went to the protest» (predicted image).